Mary Harris Thompson
Mary Harris Thompson, MD, was the founder, head physician and surgeon of the Chicago Hospital for Women and Children, renamed Mary Harris Thompson Hospital after her death in 1895. She was one of the first women to practice medicine in Chicago where she contributed to the health of civil war veterans families. Over the course of her life she made numerous contributions to science and education that have made a lasting impact.
Early life and education
Thompson was born in Fort Ann, Washington County, New York, on April 15, 1829. She was the daughter of John Harris and Calista Corbin Thompson. She began her studies at a nearby school, then transferred to Fort Edward Institute, New York which offered college preparatory classes among others. She continued her studies at a Methodist school, Troy Conference Academy, located in West Poultney, Vermont, and in 1860 enrolled in classes at the New England Female Medical College in Boston which stands ad the oldest medical institution exclusively dedicated to women's learning. During this time she spent one year in an internship at the New York Infirmary for Women and Children, which was founded by physicians Emily and Elizabeth Blackwell. Blackwell held the distinction of becoming the first women to enroll into medical school within the U.S and pathed the way for generations of women to some in medicine, including Thompson. She received her medical degree in 1863 from the first medical school for women. In 1890, the Chicago Medical College granted a degree ad eundem to Thompson.Career
Upon graduating from the New England Female Medical College, Thompson moved to Chicago, a city which had been founded only 30 years prior and with little competition for a woman physician. She initially worked in the Northwestern Sanitary Commission's Chicago branch for William G. Dyas and Miranda Dyas, serving Civil War veterans' families in Chicago. During this phase of her career, Thompson was limited in her ability to care for patients; women were not yet permitted to be on any of Chicago's hospital staffs, and at least one area hospital did not admit women as patients.She then founded her own hospital, with the assistance of Rev. William R. Ryder, who raised funds for the project. In May, 1865, the Chicago Hospital for Women and Children opened, and Thompson became chief surgeon and physician, and head of staff – positions she kept the rest of her life. She had very quickly emerged as the sole women in Chicago to perform major surgical procedures. Alongside being a surgeon and physician, Thompson made other medical contributions such as inventing surgical instruments including the abdominal needle which was utilized by many other medical professionals.
In 1870, Thompson founded Woman's Hospital Medical College. She soon became one of initial nine faculty members, and served in this role until 1879, when the college separated from the hospital. In 1874, she began directing a nursing school within the hospital and in 1892, she joined the faculty of the Northwestern University Woman's Medical School as a clinical professor of gynaecology.
After 10 years of practice, Thompson was admitted to the Chicago Medical Society in 1873 where she became the organization's vice president, and its first female officer, in 1886. She was a member of the American Medical Association, and the AMA's first woman to present a paper to the Section on Diseases of Children, which earned her the distinct role of Section Chair. She published and presented several papers on women's health and childhood diseases during her career which had lasting impacts in the medical field. Thompson's private practice as an abdominal and pelvic surgeon was part of her hospital work, and for years she was the sole woman performing major surgery in Chicago.