Mary Louise Brown
Mary Louise Brown was a physician and teacher who devoted over 25 years of her life to servicing the African-American community of Washington D.C. Brown was the first African-American woman to receive a wartime medical commission when she joined the Red Cross in 1918 during World War I. Brown graduated from the Howard University College of Medicine and comingled her teaching career at Black community high schools and normal schools with a medical career, often providing medical care for free.
Early life
Brown was born in 1868 in Baltimore, Maryland and raised in a family with eight other siblings. Her father, John Mifflin Brown was a bishop in the African Methodist Episcopal Church. As he was frequently reassigned to different churches and was involved in the establishment of various educational and social institutions in the South, the family frequently moved. The children were "talented" and raised in the spirit of post-Civil War Reconstruction. New opportunities for African Americans arose, and along with her brothers and sisters, Mary Brown sought a professional career.In the 1880s, Brown graduated from the Normal School for Colored Girls in Washington D.C., which, as with every Normal School of the time, provided an opportunity to begin teaching in the city's schools. Brown started teaching English at a high school in the city's Black community.
Medical career
While teaching during the day, Brown attended evening classes at the historically Black Howard University. She graduated from Normal department of the university; then, following in the footsteps of her older brother John Mifflin Jr, Brown attended Medical college from 1894 to 1898. Her graduating class of 1898 produced 32 M.D.'s, three of which were women. In an "unprecedented" move at the time for women of color, Brown continued on to post-graduate medical education, traveling to Scotland to complete courses at the University of Edinburgh in 1899 and 1900.Upon her return to Washington D.C. Brown settled at 1813 Vermont Avenue NW, where she would reside until her death. Brown combined medical and teaching careers, teaching in the mornings and practicing medicine in the afternoons. She devoted over 25 years of her life in service to the Black community of Washington D.C. At the time, an advanced degree earned teachers higher pay. In Brown's case, her medical degree enabled her to transition from a high school teacher of English to a science teacher at a normal school, which precipitated a significant pay increase — from $650 per year to $1000 per year,