American Women's Hospitals

Variant names

Hide Profile

The American Women's Hospitals (AWH) developed from the War Service Committee of the Medical Women's National Association (later, American Medical Women's Association (AMWA)) in 1917 to provide, register and finance American women physicians for war work; offer medical and emergency relief to refugees; and, later, to provide international public health service. In 1959, AWH became an independent agency and remained such until 1982 when it re-merged with AMWA.

In the earliest years of the AWHS, from 1917 to 1920, the major arenas of activity were in France, Albania, Greece and the Near East. AWHS personnel labored extensively in the last three areas throughout the 1920s and 1930s, and added services to Serbia, Russia, Asia and the rural United States. The outbreak of World War II returned their attentions to Western Europe as projects of emergency medical relief were made necessary in war zones. In the post-war period, the AWHS worked to shift administrative and professional duties to the home country, financing the training and employment of native female personnel in China, Japan, Haiti, India, Southeast Asia and the Philippines. More recent AWHS ventures focused on Indians in North and South America, and rural residents of the southeastern United States, curtailing emergency medical services in favor of on-going prevention programs. For example, AWHS was involved in the study and prevention of pellagra in Spartanburg, South Carolina between 1929 and the mid 1950s. Generally, AWHS's efforts focused on emergency medical care, maternity and children's welfare, preventive care programs and the coordination of social and economic care with medical aid.

From the guide to the American Women's Hospitals Service photographs, 1917-1982, (Drexel University: College of Medicine Legacy Center)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Lovejoy, Esther Pohl, 1870-1967. Esther Pohl Lovejoy Collection, 1849-1994. Oregon Health & Science University Library, OHSU Library
referencedIn Bertha Van Hoosen papers, Bulk, 1920-1950, 1913-1971 Drexel University: College of Medicine Legacy Center
referencedIn Parmelee, Ruth A. (Ruth Azneve), 1885-1973. Ruth A. Parmelee papers, 1922-1945. Stanford University, Hoover Institution Library
referencedIn Lovejoy, Esther Pohl, 1870-1967. Esther Pohl Lovejoy Collection, 1890-1967. Oregon Health & Science University Library, OHSU Library
referencedIn Esther Pohl Lovejoy Papers, 1890-1967 Oregon Health and Science University Historical Collections and Archives
referencedIn Frost, Freda Elizabeth, 1881-1961. Freda Elizabeth Frost papers, 1855?-1955. Nevada State Historical Society
referencedIn Esther Pohl Lovejoy Papers, 1881-1977 Oregon Health and Science University Historical Collections and Archives
referencedIn Ruth A. Parmelee papers, 1865-1974, 1922-1953 Hoover Institution Archives
creatorOf American Women's Hospitals Service photographs, 1917-1982 Drexel University: College of Medicine Legacy Center
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith American Medical Women's Association. corporateBody
associatedWith Frost, Freda Elizabeth, 1881-1961. person
associatedWith Lovejoy, Esther Pohl, 1870-1967. person
associatedWith Medical Women's National Association (U.S.). corporateBody
associatedWith Morani, 1907-2001 person
associatedWith Parmelee, Ruth A. (Ruth Azneve), 1885-1973. person
associatedWith Van Hoosen, Bertha, -1863 person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Asia
Southern States
Turkey
France
India
Greece
Serbia
Subject
Child welfare
Clinics
Fund raising
Hospitals
Medicine
Medicine, Preventive
Nurses
Physicians
Women physicians
Poverty
Public health
Refugees
Rural population
War work
Women in medicine
World War I
World War II
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

Information

Permalink: http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6zw7qnb

Ark ID: w6zw7qnb

SNAC ID: 5971743