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William Lane Watkins

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William Lane Watkins
Personal details
Born
William Lane Watkins

November 26, 1852
Baltimore, Maryland
DiedDecember 31, 1929
Mitchellville, Maryland
SpouseJane E Turner
ChildrenSue Watkins, Willie Watkins, Maud Watkins, Harry Brooke Watkins
Parent(s)William H Watkins, Susan M Bowie (also spelled Buoy, Bowy, Bone or Bonie)
Residences
Alma materNew Bedford High School
Boston University School of Medicine
ProfessionPhysician, schoolteacher

William Lane Watkins was an African American physician and schoolteacher. He practiced medicine and managed a school in Prince George's County, Maryland, and was the first black man to graduate from the Boston University School of Medicine.

Family, early life and education

William L Watkins was born in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1852. His father, William H Watkins, was a white man, born in Baltimore in about 1821. His mother, Susan M Bowie, was a mixed-race woman born into slavery in Prince George's County in about 1829[1]. Prince George's County, in southern Maryland, was tobacco-producing country, where the majority of black residents in the early- to mid-1800s were enslaved[2], and the circumstances under which Susan escaped slavery are unclear. Even if she were free when she and William H Watkins met, marriage between black and white persons was illegal in Maryland at the time.

The family moved to New Bedford, Massachusetts when William L Watkins was a child, and his father worked as a city messenger there. William Lane Watkins attended New Bedford High School, graduating in 1871. In 1873 he became a member of the first class to be accepted into the newly formed Boston University School of Medicine, and he graduated in 1876, the first black man to receive an MD from the school. (Rebecca Lee Crumpler, who received an MD from the New England Female Medical College in 1864, is considered the school's first black female graduate.)

Career

Unable to establish a medical practice in Massachusetts[1], Watkins moved back to Baltimore after receiving his degree and found work in the U.S. Customs Office, where he met a trustee of the newly established Mount Nebo (Colored) Elementary School in Queen Anne Town (now Queen Anne, Maryland) in Prince George's County. He accepted a position as schoolteacher and boarded for a time with Wilson Turner, another of the trustees, and his family[3]. In 1878, he married Wilson Turner's daughter Jane E Turner, and the two eventually had four children. The family faced down white opposition in order to move into the Queen Anne city limits from the countryside where most black residents of the county then lived[3]. He served as the local doctor while continuing to manage the school, and was politically active in the Maryland Republican party. He was one of the first African Americans to serve as a delegate to the Republican Central Committee for the state[4], and was nominated as a candidate from Bowie as late as 1921.

Later life

William Watkins' two daughters died in the 1918-1919 flu epidemic, leaving him and his wife to raise two grandsons[5]. He lived in Prince George's County until his death in 1929 at age 77.

References

External links

Category:People from Baltimore Category:People from Boston

  1. ^ a b "When Society Discovered that Dr. Watkins was a Negro". portofharlem.net. Retrieved 2022-04-05.
  2. ^ Maryland State Archives (2007). A Guide to the History of Slavery in Maryland (PDF). Annapolis, Maryland: Maryland State Archives. p. 13.
  3. ^ a b "Dr. Watkins, The Colored Who Defied Housing Segregation Circa 1880". portofharlem.net. Retrieved 2022-04-05.
  4. ^ "African-American Historic and Cultural Resources in Prince George's County, Maryland by Maryland-National Capital Park & Planning Commission - Issuu". issuu.com. Retrieved 2022-04-05.
  5. ^ "The Flu Shuns Us, Says Health Doctor". portofharlem.net. Retrieved 2022-04-05.