Elizabeth Garrett Anderson and Obstetric Hospital
The Elizabeth Garrett Anderson and Obstetric Hospital and its predecessor organisations provided health care to women in central London from the mid-Victorian era. It was named after Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, one of Britain's first female physicians, and its work continues in the modern Elizabeth Garrett Anderson wing of University College Hospital, part of UCLH NHS Foundation Trust.
The former New Hospital for Women, Euston Road, London, now occupied by Unison
Two wards of the New Hospital for Women. From a magazine of 1899.
Photograph showing The New Hospital for Women, Euston Road, London, which opened in 1890 with 42 beds.
Elizabeth Garrett Anderson
Elizabeth Garrett Anderson was an English physician and suffragist. She is known for being the first woman to qualify in Britain as a physician and surgeon and as a co-founder and dean of the London School of Medicine for Women, which was the first medical school in Britain to train women as doctors. She was the first female dean of a British medical school, the first woman in Britain to be elected to a school board and, as mayor of Aldeburgh, the first female mayor in Britain.
Detail from a portrait of Garrett Anderson circa 1900
Her parents, Newson and Louisa Garrett in their old age; from What I Remember by Millicent Garrett Fawcett
A portrait of Garrett in the 1860s
Elizabeth Garrett Anderson before the Faculty of Medicine, Paris