Eva Jellett

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Eva Jellett
Born
Eva Josephine Jellett

(1868-01-06)6 January 1868
Dublin, Ireland
Died1 December 1958(1958-12-01) (aged 90)
St Austell, Cornwall, United Kingdom
NationalityIrish
OccupationPhysician

Eva Josephine Jellett (8 April 1880 – 2 July 1955), doctor, was the first woman to graduate in medicine from Dublin University.[1]

Early life and study[]

Jellett was born in Wellington Row to John Hewitt Jellett who was a clergyman, mathematician, and provost of Trinity College Dublin (TCD), and his wife and cousin Dora Charlotte Morgan (1823–1911) who was from Tivoli, Co. Cork. Jellett was initially educated by governesses from Germany and later sent to Alexandra college. She was one of the early women students, matriculating in 1897, who attended courses in the Catholic University School of Medicine, St Cecilia St., Dublin.[2] She transferred to TCD in 1904 once women were permitted to attend that college.[3] She graduated with her MB in September 1905 making her the University's first women graduate in medicine.[1] Her niece was the artist Mainie Jellett.[4][5]

Career[]

After working as a clinical clerk in the Coombe Hospiral in Dublin Jellet moved to India in 1906 to take up a position in the Dublin University Mission in Hazaribagh.[6] Once she arrived in 1908 she was able to run the newly founded women's hospital, St Columba's hospital for Women. In 1919 she was promoted to head associate giving her control over all the female staff in India. She stepped down as head in 1923 and returned in 1924 having spent almost all her time at that hospital. She spent one year, 1917, in the British military hospital in Bombay.[1][5][7][8][9]

Death[]

After she retired, Jellet moved to Switzerland for some years before finally moving, c 1938, to Gorranhaven, St Austell, Cornwall. It was there she died.[1][5]

Further reading[]

  • Thom, 1906
  • Medical Directory, 1906–58
  • Medical Register, 1906–58
  • Light and Life: the Dublin University Missionary Magazine, ix, no. 6 (1917)
  • K. W. S. Kennedy, Fifty years in Chota Nagpur (1939) Rosemary ffoliott, The Pooles of Mayfield (1955)
  • R. B. McDowell and D. A. Webb, Trinity College Dublin 1592–1952: an academic history (1982)
  • John Fleetwood, The history of medicine in Ireland (1983)
  • F. O. C. Meenan, Cecilia Street: the Catholic University School of Medicine 1855–1931 (1987)
  • J. B. Lyons, ‘History of early women doctors’, Irish Medical Times: Women in medicine, special supplement (Jan. 1992), 38–40
  • GRO (Ire. and UK)

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d "The Dictionary of Irish Biography".
  2. ^ Laura Kelly (2015). Irish Women in Medicine, C. 1880s−1920s: Origins, Education and Careers. Oxford University Press. pp. 87–. ISBN 978-0-7190-9740-9.
  3. ^ Gary Culliton (21 October 2008). "Watch out, there are women on campus".
  4. ^ "Tercentenary Alumni Gala Celebration: School of Medicine Dinner". 26 August 2011.
  5. ^ a b c Joan FitzPatrick Dean (25 November 2014). All Dressed Up: Modern Irish Historical Pageantry. Syracuse University Press. pp. 85–. ISBN 978-0-8156-5284-7.
  6. ^ "Minutes, working papers of Executive Committee, correspondence, and miscellaneous records of the Dublin University Mission to the diocese of Chota Nagpur [DUMCN], Bihar Province, North India" (PDF). Representative Church Body Library, Dublin.
  7. ^ Diarmid A. Finnegan; Jonathan Jeffrey Wright (9 March 2016). Spaces of Global Knowledge: Exhibition, Encounter and Exchange in an Age of Empire. Taylor & Francis. pp. 231–. ISBN 978-1-317-05172-5.
  8. ^ At work : letters of Marie Elizabeth Hayes, M.B. missionary doctor Delhi, 1905-8. 1909.
  9. ^ The year book of missions in India, Burma and Ceylon : 1912. 1912.
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