Alice Sollier


Alice Sollier was a French doctor. She was the first Black woman to earn a bachelor's degree in France and in 1887 became the first Black French woman to qualify as a medical doctor. She was the first French female physician to become the director of a private healthcare facility.

Early life and education

Alice Maille was born on 3 April 1861 in Compiègne to Flore-Hortense Maille and Mathieu Victoire, known as Dubois. Her mother was white and her father was Black. He had been enslaved in the colony of French Guiana but freed in 1834. He was a dentist by the time of Alice's birth. Her parents married on 8 May 1867, some years after Alice's birth, and she took the surname Mathieu-Dubois, based on her father's first name and part of his surname. Her mother died six months after the wedding after which her father then took sole responsibility for her education.
Alice Mathieu-Dubois earned her Bachelor of Science degree in Paris in 1879, followed by a Bachelor of Arts degree in rhetoric in 1880 and philosophy in 1881. In 1880, the newspaper Le Gaulois reported that "Miss Mathieu-Dubois, who had already obtained her bachelor's degree in science the previous year, successfully passed exams that, to our knowledge, had never before been taken by a Black woman”. Another newspaper, Le Pays, noted in 1881 that only two young women had taken and passed the second part of the baccalaureate in arts, earning a “fairly good” grade and the congratulations of the jury. One of them was “a young Black woman, already a bachelor of science, Mlle Mathieu-Dubois, who had begun her medical studies with a view to obtaining a doctorate in medicine”.
Mathieu-Dubois enrolled at the University of Paris Faculty of Medicine. Women had only been allowed to enroll at the Faculty of Medicine since 1869 when Madeleine Brès had succeeded in making her case to be admitted. In Paris, she rented a room from the father of her friend Blanche Edwards, herself the first woman to pass the l'internat de médecine exam in France. Mathieu-Dubois was an extern in Paris hospitals from 1883. She was ranked 72nd out of 254 in the exam. Her future husband ranked 32nd. Two other women passed the externship exam alongside her.
Mathieu-Dubois married Paul Sollier, a fellow medical student, on 21 January 1886. She was known as Alice Sollier from that point in time. The couple had two children: René Victor, born on 3 November 1886 and died three days later, and Suzanne, born on 8 November 1887, fifteen days after her mother defended her doctoral thesis.
Alice Mathieu-Dubois earned her doctorate in 1887 with a thesis entitled L’état de la dentition chez les enfants idiots et arriérés: contribution à l’étude des dégénérescences dans l’espèce humaine, which was illustrated with 32 figures. After leaning towards dentistry like her father, she eventually turned her attention to nervous disorders.
The press reported on her thesis defence, "The female doctor is no longer a curiosity. What is rarer is a Black female doctor. One such doctor, Mrs. Sollier, has just successfully defended her thesis in medicine" and stated "despite her colour, she is French by birth", some using more racist terms. Le Petit Journal described her as "a tall, beautiful person with slightly brownish skin, large black eyes, invariably dressed in a blue dress with a masculine cut, without any frills" and stated that she was well known on the Left Bank in Paris because of her summer walks in the jardin du Luxembourg with a book in her hand.
Sollier registered for the internship competition at the same time as Blanche Edwards, but did not take the exams, possibly because she was discouraged by the demonstrations organised by many students against the presence of women on the day of the competition, as well as by racist remarks from fellow students and the press. Le Figaro, in an article on the few female doctors in Paris, referred to her alongside her contemporaries Blanche Edwards and Augusta Déjerine-Klumpke without naming her but referred to "this little Creole girl whom all the students call Bamboula".

Career

From 1889 to 1897, Sollier and her husband ran the Villa Montsouris clinic on Rue de la Santé in Paris. In doing so, she became the first woman to run a private healthcare facility dedicated to nervous disorders.
In 1896, her husband founded a limited partnership, Dr Paul Sollier et Cie, known as the Établissement d'hydrothérapie médicale de Boulogne-sur-Seine, of which he was the sole managing director and a major shareholder. Alice Sollier's ‘technical collaboration’ was included in the list of contributions. The company's articles of association stipulated that Alice Sollier would become manager if Paul Sollier resigned or died. From April 1897 to June 1921, Alice Sollier co-managed the Boulogne-sur-Seine sanatorium with her husband, which specialised in the treatment of nervous system disorders and drug addiction.
In 1904, Sollier was interviewed by Gabrielle Réval for the daily newspaper L'Écho de Paris and for Réval's book, L’Avenir de nos filles, about her role in the medical and practical management of the sanatorium, the place of young women in medical studies, and medical careers for women.
From June 1921 or 1922 onwards, Sollier practised as a doctor at the Saint-Cloud neurological clinic. She co-directed it with Dr Morat, formerly an assistant doctor at the Boulogne sanatorium. She also practised at the Malmaison sanatorium in Rueil-Malmaison until 1935.

Later life

Sollier's husband died on 8 June 1933. Léon Daudet, who had known him when he was also studying medicine, paid tribute to him in an article published in the far-right daily newspaper L'Action française and dedicated to “docteur” Alice Sollier, describing her as Paul Sollier's "admirable wife and collaborator".
Sollier remained in Saint-Cloud until her house and clinic were requisitioned by the Germans during the Occupation of World War II. She lived with her daughter at the Sainte-Anne Hospital, where her daughter's husband worked, then on Rue d'Alésia, Paris, where she died on 29 January 1942.

Awards

In 1925, Alice Sollier, née Alice Dubois, was awarded the croix de chevalier of the Légion d'honneur, with the citation:Sollier's patron in the order was Countess Anna de Noailles, who was treated twice at the Boulogne sanatorium and in 1924 at the Saint-Cloud clinic.

Legacy

Following proposals to name a street for her in Crépy-en-Valois, on 20 December 2024, the conseil municipal de Compiègne approved the creation of a street bearing Alice Sollier's maiden name in the Musicians' Quarter, which was inaugurated in 2025.
A square in the 13th arrondissement of Paris was named Place Alice-Mathieu-Dubois in June 2025.
In 20206, Sollier was announced as one of 72 historical women in STEM whose names have been proposed to be added to the 72 men celebrated on the Eiffel Tower by the Mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo.