Person    | Female  Born 9/6/1836  Died 17/12/1917

Elizabeth Garrett Anderson

Categories: Gender Issues, Medicine

Born in Whitechapel. She was the first female doctor to be trained in Britain and went on to promote the medical training of women at a time when medicine was an all-male profession. Elder sister of Millicent Garrett Fawcett. Mother of Dr Louisa Garrett Anderson.

Determined to become a doctor despite the restrictions on women, she enrolled at Middlesex Hospital as a nursing student and spotting a loophole, took, and passed, the apothecary examinations. The London Society of Apothecaries promptly banned women from taking their exams. To achieve her medical degree she learnt French and sat the exams in Paris. The British Medical Register refused to recognise this qualification. Even the most subservient of women would be raving feminists by this stage. She founded a hospital staffed entirely by women and a medical school so that women could train as doctors.

1908 she was elected Mayor of Aldeburgh, the first female Mayor in England.

On her death the hospital she founded was renamed after her in her honour.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Elizabeth Garrett Anderson

Commemorated ati

Elizabeth Garrett Anderson - birth

Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, 1836 - 1919, was born in a house formerly on this...

Read More

Elizabeth Garrett Anderson - W1

London County Council Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, 1836 - 1917, the first wom...

Read More

Somers Town Mural

This mural was commissioned by the GLC in 1980 and moved to this site by St P...

Read More

Other Subjects

Rose Mary Crawshay

Rose Mary Crawshay

Philanthropist, feminist, educationist. Born Rose Mary Yeates in Horton, Buckinghamshire, to William Willson Yeates and his first wife Mary. When she was seven three of her baby sisters died in qui...

Person, Education, Gender Issues, Philanthropy

1 memorial
Lord Alfred Douglas

Lord Alfred Douglas

Journalist and poet. Son of the Marquess of Queensbury and lover of Oscar Wilde. Known as Bosie (a nickname given to him by his mother as a derivation of 'boysie'). After Wilde's release from priso...

Person, Gender Issues, Journalism / Publishing, Poetry

1 memorial
Boo Armstrong

Boo Armstrong

Born as Rachel Armstrong she grew up in Ealing. As an adult lived in Camden - the photo shows her on her canal boat Moonshine on which she lived in the Cumberland Basin from 1999. The Picture sourc...

Person, Gender Issues, Medicine

1 memorial
Lady Jane Francesca Wilde

Lady Jane Francesca Wilde

Born Dublin. Mother of Oscar Wilde. Poet under the pseudonym ‘Speranza’. Supporter of the Irish nationalist movement and advocate of women’s rights. Died 146 (now 87) Oakley Street.

Person, Gender Issues, Nationalism, Poetry, Ireland

1 memorial
Hertha Ayrton

Hertha Ayrton

Electrical engineer and suffragist.  Born Phoebe Sarah Marks in Portsmouth.  Aged 16 began teaching in London.  Studied maths at Girton College Cambridge.  Married William Ayrton in 1885.  Elected ...

Person, Gender Issues, Science

1 memorial

Previously viewed

London Parochial Charities

London Parochial Charities

In 1880 a report by a royal commission led to the City of London Parochial Charities Act. This provided that the five largest parishes of London could continue to administer their own charitable en...

Group, Benefactor

3 memorials
Greenwich Foot Tunnel - war bomb damage repair

Greenwich Foot Tunnel - war bomb damage repair

E14, Greenwich Foot Tunnel, North End

There are identical plaques at each end of the section of the tunnel that was damaged. As far as we know, these are the only memorials un...

3 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Brook and Cranleigh House Residents Association

Brook and Cranleigh House Residents Association

Also known as "Brook and Cranleigh House Tenants and Residents Association".  Active c. 2013.

Group, Community / Clubs

2 memorials