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  1. Notable women in healthcare: Elizabeth Garrett-Anderson J Perioper Pract. 2008 Oct;18(10):451. doi: 10.1177/175045890801801005. Author Harold Ellis 1 Affiliation ... Biography Historical Article MeSH terms Faculty, Medical / history ...

  2. 16 de dic. de 2017 · Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, who died on Dec 17, 1917, was one of these early pioneers. Elizabeth Garrett was born in London, UK, on June 9, 1836. She was the second woman to gain a place on the British Medical Register, the first being Elizabeth Blackwell, who had trained at Geneva Medical College in New York, USA, and registered in 1856.

  3. A detailed biography of Elizabeth Garrett Anderson that includes includes images, quotations and the main facts of her life. Women's Suffrage. Parliamentary Reform. Key Stage 3. GCSE British History. A-level. Last updated: 21st August 2023.

  4. Elizabeth married James George Skelton Anderson in 1871 and had three children. She studied chemistry and nursing, and applied to several medical schools, all of which refused to take her. She used a legal loophole and got a doctor’s licence from the Society of Apothecaries in 1865, then qualified as a doctor from the University of Sorbonne in France in 1870.

  5. Elizabeth Garrett Anderson was born on 9th June 1836 at Whitechapel, London to Newson Garett and Louise Dunnell. She was their second child and together they had nine children. Newson Garett was a merchant of Aldeburgh, Suffolk. Elizabeth was tutored at home and at a private school. In 1860, Elizabeth resolved to study medicine.

  6. 25 de dic. de 2021 · Elizabeth Garrett-Anderson, born in London, England, in 1836 and raised in the coastal village of Aldeburgh, succeeded in becoming the UK’s first woman doctor against popular opinion when no official route existed for women to become registered physicians in the UK. In working to carve out a medical path for women, she helped found the London ...

  7. In 1878, Elizabeth Garrett married James Anderson, a London shipowner and financial adviser to East London Hospital. She did not, however, give up her medical practice, her fight for equality, or ...