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Sarah Marinda Loguen Fraser, née Loguen, (January 29, 1850 – April 9, 1933) was an American physician and pediatrician. She was the fourth female African-American physician in the United States, and the first female doctor in the Dominican Republic.[1]
Early life
[edit]Fraser was the daughter of Rev. Jermain Wesley Loguen, a noted abolitionist who had escaped slavery, and his wife Caroline. She was born the fifth of eight children at her family home in Syracuse, New York. [1] As this house became an important stopping point on the underground railroad, eventually giving shelter to approximately 1,500 escaped slaves as they traveled to safety in Canada, Sarah gained experience from a young age in helping to treat the injuries and illnesses they had suffered as a result of their slavery or escape. She decided to become a physician as a young girl, after seeing a young boy pinned beneath a wagon, vowing "I will never, never see a human being in need of aid again and not be able to help."[2] She was supported in her career path by her family physician, Michael D. Benedict, whom she shadowed for five months.[3] Later on, Benedict would be her instructor in some of her medical courses.[4]
Fraser was admitted to Syracuse University School of Medicine at age 23. Her 1873 enrollment in medical school was celebrated by a local Syracuse newspaper which wrote "This is women’s rights in the right direction, and we cordially wish the estimable young lady every success in the pursuit of the profession of her choice."[2]
Education
[edit]In 1876, she became the first woman to gain an M.D. from Syracuse University School of Medicine and is believed to be only the fourth African-American woman to become a licensed physician in the United States, the second in New York, and the first to graduate from a coeducational medical school. In fall of 1876, she began interning in pediatrics and obstetrics at the Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia, then continued on to the New England Hospital for Women and Children to complete her internship in 1878. This second hospital was unique in its use of all-women staffing, and it was here that Fraser gained a passion for obstetrics and midwifery.[4]
Medical career
[edit]In 1879, Fraser began her own private practice in Washington D.C., where she lived with her sister Amelia, Amelia's husband Lewis Douglass (son of noted abolitionist Frederick Douglass), and their aunt. It was here that she is reported to have first gained the nickname "Miss Doc," which she would be referred to as for the rest of her career.[5]
In 1884, following a special license by then-president Fernando Arturo de Meriño, Fraser became the first woman authorized to practice medicine in the Dominican Republic.[6] However, she was only permitted to treat women and children due to her gender. In addition, since her family's income from their drug store was sufficient for the family, she was able to offer free treatment to the poor.[5]
She stopped her practice in 1894, after the sudden death of her husband.[1] She continued running their family drug store, which was a
In 1907, Fraser began practicing pediatric medicine again from her home in Syracuse, New York and mentored black midwives. Her unique position as both a university-educated physician and midwife allowed for her to impact otherwise under-served populations, which had been her interest since entering medicine. Fraser wrote in her private journals that "to have those of my race come to me for aid—and for me to be able to give it—will be all the Heaven I want."[4]
Following financial difficulty surrounding an unpaid loan to her brother-in-law Lewis Douglass, she briefly worked as resident physician at the Blue Plains Industrial School for Boys in Maryland, but soon quit due to discrimination and poor treatment.[1] She later moved to Washington DC to be with her sister Amelia, where she remained until her death in 1933.[3]
Personal life
[edit]After graduation from medical school, Fraser was proposed to by a white classmate, who claimed to love her but also implied that having a white husband would be essential to her professional success. She declined, but while she was in Washington D.C., began a correspondence with chemist Dr. Charles Fraser. Encouraged in part by family friend Frederick Douglass, who approved of their relationship and had arranged their initial meeting, the two married in 1882.[6] Soon after, they moved to his home in the Puerto Plata in the Dominican Republic. On December 23,1883, she gave birth a daughter, Gregoria Alejandrina, named after her godfather Gregorio Luperón.[6] However, only a native midwife attended her birth, with no medical intervention, and Fraser sustained damage to her internal organs during childbirth. This resulted in her being unable to carry any more children.[1]
In 1894, Charles Fraser died due to stroke. With no reason to stay in the Dominican Republic, she moved back to Washington D.C. in early 1897 and, unsatisfied with the racism in American education systems[6], enrolled her daughter in boarding school in Neuilly-sur-Seine in France. From then to 1901, Fraser and her daughter travelled frequently between Washington and France.[1] In 1901, she settled with her daughter in Washington D.C. She passed away at home in Syracuse, NY on April 9, 1933 due to kidney disease and Alzheimer's disease. [3]
Legacy
[edit]When Sarah Fraser died in 1933, the Dominican Republic declared a nine-day period of national mourning with flags flown at half-mast. A small park[7] in Syracuse honors the Loguen family while the Child Care Center at Upstate Medical University is named in Sarah’s honor.[8] Each year, Upstate also awards the "Sarah Loguen Fraser Scholarship" to a first or second year medical student who demonstrates need and "holds similar ideals to Dr. Sarah Loguen Fraser."[9] In recent years, Upstate has celebrated "Sarah Loguen Fraser Day" in February, typically with a lecture and luncheon, as a part of Black History Month.[10] Dr. Fraser is buried at Lincoln Memorial Cemetery in Suitland, Maryland.[11]
- ^ a b c d e f vd Luft, E. (2000). "Sarah Loguen Fraser, MD (1850 to 1933): the fourth African-American woman physician". Journal of the National Medical Association. 92 (3): 149–153. ISSN 0027-9684. PMC 2640561. PMID 10745647 – via PubMed.
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: CS1 maint: PMC format (link) - ^ a b "Sarah Loguen Fraser: Determined to be a doctor".
- ^ a b c "Fraser, Sarah Loguen (1850-1933) | The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed". blackpast.org. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- ^ a b c Porter, Dorothy (2008-11-12). "Three 19th-Century Women Doctors: Elizabeth Blackwell, Mary Walker, and Sarah Loguen Fraser". JAMA. 300 (18): 2182. doi:10.1001/jama.2008.590. ISSN 0098-7484.
- ^ a b "Sarah Marinda Loguen-Fraser · Black Wealth and the 1843 National Colored Convention · ColoredConventions.org". coloredconventions.org. Retrieved 2018-11-30.
- ^ a b c d Mayes, April J. (2014-02-18), "Debating Dominicanidad in the Nineteenth Century", The Mulatto Republic, University Press of Florida, pp. 15–35, doi:10.5744/florida/9780813049199.003.0002, ISBN 9780813049199, retrieved 2018-11-27
- ^ "Friends of Loguen Park Association - Loguen Park". loguenparkassociation.weebly.com.
- ^ "Locations/Directions:SUNY Upstate Medical University". www.upstate.edu.
- ^ "Sarah Loguen Fraser Scholarship - Syracuse Medical Alumni Office". medalumni.upstate.edu. Retrieved 2018-11-13.
- ^ "Elizabeth Blackwell and Sarah Loguen Fraser lectures presented in February | UpstateOnline: A Publication for Upstate Medical University". upstateonline.info. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- ^ Dr. Sarah Marinda Loguen Fraser at Find a Grave