Dorothy Boulding Ferebee
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Dorothy Celeste Ferebee (Template:Nee Boulding; October 10, 1898 – September 14, 1980) was an American obstetrician and civil rights activist.
Born in a middle-class family in Norfolk, Virginia, Boulding grew up in Boston, where she attended The English High School and Simmons College before studying medicine at Tufts University. Prevented by racism and segregation from continuing her career at Boston's white hospitals, she took a job at the Freedmen's Hospital in Washington D.C., where she became an obstetrician and promoted contraception and sex education. She married Claude Thurston Ferebee, a professor of dentistry, in 1930.
Ferebee was director of the Mississippi Health Project, which provided healthcare to impoverished farmers in the state, from 1935 to 1942. She was an active participant in the movements for the rights of black Americans and of women. As president of the National Council of Negro Women, she issued a "Nine Point Programme" against racism and misogyny in American public life. She was involved with several international development organisations, including UNICEF, the International Council of Women and the World Health Organization.
Background and early life
Dorothy Celeste Boulding was born on October 10, 1898, in Norfolk, Virginia. While she was young, her mother, Florence Boulding, became ill and sent her and her brother, Ruffin, to live with her great-aunt in Boston, Massachusetts.Template:Sfn Dorothy and Ruffin grew up in the middle-class neighborhood of Beacon Hill.Template:Sfn Her great-aunt's family included eight attorneys, and discussions about law dominated the household, but Boulding later wrote that she had always wanted to be a doctor. As a child, she tried to act as "doctor" to ailing and injured animals.Template:Sfn
Education
Boulding attended school in Boston from 1904 until 1908, when she moved to The English High School, graduating at the top of her class in 1915. She subsequently attended Simmons College in Boston,Template:Sfn where she became a member of the Epsilon Chapter of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sororityTemplate:Sfn and graduated in 1920.Template:Sfn In the same year, she entered medical school at Tufts University School of Medicine,Template:Sfn from which she graduated in 1924Template:Sfn among the top five in her class.Template:Sfn In 1927, she was one of nine women to pass the District of Columbia medical exam.Template:Sfn
Medical career
Despite her degree from Tufts and her high ranking amongst her class, Boulding was not allowed to intern at white hospitals in the Boston area.Template:Sfn She moved to Washington, D.C., and started her internship at the black-owned and black-staffed Freedmen's Hospital. She worked at the Freedmen's Hospital as an obstetrician, where she began promoting contraception and sex education to women, both highly controversial topics at the time.Template:Sfn
Upon completing her internship in 1925, she began her own medical clinic in an impoverished part of the city.Template:Sfn To improve healthcare in the neighborhood, she persuaded the trustees of the Friendship House, a charitable segregated medical center, to open an additional clinic for African Americans. This clinic was later named Southeast Neighborhood House. She further set up the Southeast Neighborhood Society, which contained a playground and daycare for the children of working mothers.Template:Sfn In the same year, she joined the faculty of Howard University Medical School where she was appointed medical physician to women. In 1930, she married Claude Thurston Ferebee, a professor in Howard University College of Dentistry. In 1949, she was named medical director for Howard's health services, a post she held until her retirement in 1968.Template:Sfn
Charitable and civil rights activism
As National President of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc., Ferebee directed the Mississippi Health Project, a project sponsored by the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority to provide healthcare to sharecropper families in Holmes County, Mississippi throughout the summers of 1935 to 1942. She additionally became an active member of the civil rights movement as a member of the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW). In the fall of 1949, she was elected president of the organization.Template:Sfn Here, she augmented the organization's efforts to promote healthcare, and education, and continued its work to end discrimination against African Americans and women in the military, housing, employment, and voting. As president of NCNW, she issued her "Nine Point Program" which outlined a plan to achieve fundamental civil rights through educational and legislative initiatives. Through all this, Boulding remained a full-time obstetrician.Template:Sfn
Ferebee served on the boards of the White House's Children and Youth Council, as well as the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). She was selected by the U.S. State Department as a delegate to the International Council of Women of the World in Greece.Template:Sfn The Department of Labor's Women's Bureau named her to a delegation that observed the impact of postwar conditions on women and children in Germany. She was appointed to the Council for Food for Peace by US president John F. Kennedy in the 1960s, in which capacity she spent five months travelling in Africa and speaking on preventative medicine.Template:Sfn
In 1963, she traveled to Selma, Alabama as part of a campaign to register African Americans to vote. Here, she also spoke on behalf of women's rights.Template:Sfn In 1967, Boulding was appointed as one of the five U.S. delegates to the World Health Organization's twentieth assembly in Geneva as well as the D.C. Commission on the Status of Women, which she chaired from 1971 to 1974.Template:Sfn She was also a board member of the American Association of University Women.Template:Sfn
Personal life
Dorothy and Claude Ferebee had twins: a son named Claude and a daughter named Dorothy. Dorothy died at the age of eighteen, from influenza.Template:Sfn
Ferebee died from congestive heart failure on September 14, 1980, at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington, D.C.Template:Sfn
References
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Works cited
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Further reading
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External links
- Changing the Face of Medicine - National Library of Medicine
- Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed
- Official Website of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated: Presidents
- Presidents of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority
Template:Alpha Kappa Alpha International Presidents Template:Authority control
- Pages with script errors
- 1898 births
- 1980 deaths
- 20th-century African-American physicians
- 20th-century American women physicians
- 20th-century American physicians
- American gynecologists
- American obstetricians
- Howard University faculty
- People from Norfolk, Virginia
- Activists from Boston
- Health professionals from Boston
- Simmons University alumni
- Tufts University School of Medicine alumni
- African-American activists
- Howard University College of Medicine alumni
- African-American women physicians
- 20th-century African-American women
- American women academics
- Alpha Kappa Alpha presidents