Women from three different countries training to become doctors at Women's Medical College of Philadelphia in 1885. From left to right: Dr. Anandibai Joshi (from India), Dr. Kei Okami (from Japan) and Dr. Sabat Islambouli (from Syria). All were among the first women to practice Western medicine in their respective countries.
Ralph Fiennes
All this month, the Science Library is highlighting the lives, research and medical breakthroughs of Oberlin College affiliated women, with displays at the library’s entrance, social media posts, and photographs of notable women added to the portrait collection on the north wall. That small collection was male-dominated for decades - it was high time to represent the achievements of scientists and medical professionals who identify as female.
The recent additions to the portrait wall are June E. Osborn ‘57 (photo above), Joanne Chory ‘77 and Matilda Arabella Evans, who attended Oberlin in the late 1880s, leaving in 1891.
Thanks to Science Library Associate Jennifer Schreiner for creating the elements for the display on the bulletin board. We invite you to take a look! The display is summarized on the ObieSciLib Instragram post on March 8.
See also ObieSciLib on Tumblr for a look at the current Oberlin College women of science. Women in all of the natural science departments regularly publish research articles, numbering over 40 articles in the past four years alone. Books also have been published recently; see these authors in OBIS: Marta Laskowski, Jillian Scudder, and Lynne Bianchi. The tradition of scientific achievement and contributing to scientific knowledge continues.
“ I know you’ll come carry me out to the Palace of Winds. That’s what I’ve wanted: to walk in such a place with you. With friends, on an earth without maps. ”
We have a few nursing materials in our collections such as Chemistry for Nurses (1914), pictured above, and Applied Chemistry for Nurses (1926).
ESBAT • oil on panel • 2019 for the RITUAL exhibition at Haven Gallery in New York
Ralph Fiennes Sunshine
Summer trip 2018: The Clay Castle, Transfagarasan Road, Sighisoara Medieval City and Turda Salt Mine / Romania.
“ I know you’ll come carry me out to the Palace of Winds. That’s what I’ve wanted: to walk in such a place with you. With friends, on an earth without maps. ”
Ralph Fiennes
Here's a really beautiful publisher's binding on a 1902 edition of Fairyland of Science. The end paper with a Pegasus and the title page were definitely worth sharing too. This book was written by Arabella Buckley for a young audience to learn about science through imagination and story telling.
The fairyland of science, 1902. by Arabella B. Buckley.