Constellation Similarity Assertions

Van Hoosen, Bertha, 1863-1952

Bertha Van Hoosen (1863-1952) was born in Stony Brook, Michigan, to Joshua and Saran Ann (Taylor) Van Hoosen. Her father, Joshua, profited from the California Gold Rush returning to Michigan in 1857 with sufficient money to buy a house and marry Bertha's mother. Bertha's mother was a schoolteacher and both parents sought to provide Bertha and her older sister with as much education as possible. She attended the Rochester Academy, Pontiac High School, and the University of Michigan. Bertha's parents, however, were not supportive of her plans to study medicine and Bertha used money earned from teaching calisthenics and physiology to finance her professional training. Despite difficulties and occasional delays, Bertha Van Hoosen received her M.D. from the University of Michigan Medical School in 1888. She had medical residences at the Woman's Hospital in Detroit, the Michigan Asylum for the Insane in Kalamazoo, and the New England Hospital for Women and Children in Boston, Massachusetts. Dr. Van Hoosen opened her own private practice in Chicago in 1892 and taught anatomy (without pay) at Northwestern University Woman's Medical School. She studied surgery under Byron Robinson and later headed the obstetrical department of the Chicago Hospital for Women and Children (1896-1899). She joined the surgical staff of Provident Hospital, an institution that also provided service and training to African Americans. She briefly headed the gynecology department at Northwestern University Woman's Medical School in 1901 for nine months prior to the institution's closure. Dr. Bertha Van Hoosen later became the first female faculty member of the University of Illinois College of Medicine despite considerable opposition from male faculty. She experimented with the use of scopolamine-morphine anesthesia in surgery, received the highest score in the 1913 Civil Service Board examinations for gynecological staff at Cook County Hospital, and was ultimately appointed head of the obstetrics department at Loyola University of Chicago's medical school in 1918. Dr. Van Hoosen was a co-founder of the Medical Women's National Association (MWNA) in 1915 and supported the career of her niece, Sarah Van Hoosen Jones, who received a Ph.D. in Animal Genetics from the University of Wisconsin in 1921. Bertha Van Hoosen suffered a stroke in October, 1951 and died at a convalescent home in Romeo, Michigan, in 1952.

From the description of Bertha Van Hoosen papers, 1931-1960 (University of Illinois-Chicago Library). WorldCat record id: 59226737

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Van Hoosen, Bertha, -1863

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6sk68f7 (person)

Bertha Van Hoosen was born on March 26, 1863 to Joshua and Sarah Taylor Van Hoosen at Stoney Creek, Michigan. Although very supportive of education generally, the Van Hoosen’s did not support their daughter's desire to become a doctor. Despite their views, Van Hoosen graduated from the University of Michigan with her BA in 1884 and then became one of the first women to graduate from the University of Michigan Medical School with her MD in 1888. Van Hoosen’s medical caree...

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Van Hoosen, Bertha, 1863-

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61d6phj (person)

Dr. Bertha Van Hoosen was born in 1863, in Rochester, Michigan. After she received her A.B. from the University of Michigan in 1884, she entered the University of Michigan Medical School, from which she graduated in 1888. Van Hoosen was awarded an honorary master's degree in 1912, and Loyola gave her an LL.D. in 1926. Dr. Van Hoosen's career includes a long list of surgical and hospital services. Following three years of private practice in Chicago, she became an attending gynecolog...

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Van Hoosen, Bertha

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6qd4xhw (person)

No biographical history available for this identity.

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