Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women

55°56′49″N 3°11′02″W / 55.947°N 3.184°W / 55.947; -3.184

Plaque commemorating Sophia Louisa Jex-Blake's Medical School in Teviot Place, Edinburgh

The Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women was founded by Sophia Jex-Blake in Edinburgh, Scotland, in October 1886, with support from the National Association for Promoting the Medical Education of Women. Sophia Jex-Blake was appointed as both the director and the dean of the school. The first class of women to study at the Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women consisted of eight students, the youngest of whom was nineteen years of age. Throughout its twelve years in operation, the school struggled to find financial funding to remain open.[1] A rival institution, the Edinburgh College of Medicine for Women, set up by Elsie Inglis with the help of her father John Inglis, attracted several students of Jex-Blake, including Martha Cadell and Grace Cadell. St Mungo's College and Queen Margaret College in Glasgow also accepted women medical students and when the Scottish universities began to do so the Edinburgh School of Medicine could no longer compete.[2] The school closed in 1898. Over the twelve years of its operation, the Edinburgh School of Medicine provided education to approximately eighty female students. Of those eighty students, thirty-three completed the full course of medical training at the Edinburgh School while many others chose to finish their education at outside institutions.[1]

  1. ^ a b Somerville, JM (2005). "Dr Sophia Jex-Blake and the Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women, 1886-1898" (PDF). The Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. 35 (3): 261–7. PMID 16402502. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  2. ^ "Sophia Jex-Blake and the Edinburgh Seven". The University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 25 April 2019.