Frances Daisy Emery Allen
Portrait of Dr. Frances Daisy Emery Allen from the 1898 Fort Worth University student yearbook.
Born
Frances Daisy Emery

(1876-09-05)September 5, 1876
Kaufman County, Texas
DiedDecember 7, 1958(1958-12-07) (aged 82)
Fort Worth, Texas
NationalityAmerican
Alma materFort Worth Medical College
OccupationPhysician

Dr. Frances Daisy Emery Allen (1876–1958) was a pioneering physician in Fort Worth, Texas. She was the first female graduate of a medical college in the state of Texas and one of the first female physicians to practice in Tarrant County.

Early life

Frances Daisy Emery was born September 5, 1876, in Kaufman County, Texas, to James Wallace and Elizabeth Brown Emery. James Wallace Emery had a master's degree from Bowdoin College and had been an outspoken abolitionist in the 1850s.[1] The ninth of twelve children, four-year-old Daisy announced her intentions to become a doctor, a goal encouraged by her parents. The Emery family moved to Fort Worth when Daisy was fourteen years old. She attended Fort Worth public schools, where her father was also a teacher, and graduated from Fort Worth High School.[2]

Medical training and career

Daisy Emery applied to and was initially refused admission to the medical college of Fort Worth University, but was admitted when she pointed out that no rules specifically excluded women from the school. She was thus admitted to the charter class of Fort Worth Medical College (also known as Fort Worth Medical School and Fort Worth School of Medicine) in 1894, where she was the only female student for a full year. In 1897 she graduated with honors, ranking second in a class of seventeen students. She had the distinction of being the first woman to graduate from a medical college in Texas.[2][3]

Dr. Emery worked in private practice in Fort Worth for two years, making her one of the first female physicians in the Tarrant County. She also worked as an evaluating physician for Penn Mutual Life Insurance's female applicants.[3] In 1899, she moved to Washington, D.C. for postgraduate education. She lived with a married sister in Maryland while completing an internship and residency at Women and Children's Hospital in Washington. There she became involved in women's suffrage, developing an interest in women's voting rights, attending lectures by Susan B. Anthony and other activists, and even sewing her own bloomers.[1] Dr. Daisy Emery returned to Texas in 1901 to care for her mother, who was suffering from rheumatoid arthritis, and accepted a teaching position at Dallas Medical College.[1][2]

On November 30, 1903, Frances Daisy Emery married James Walter Allen, a classmate from Fort Worth Medical College with whom she had remained a relationship. Allen was a native of White Settlement, in western Tarrant County.The couple moved to Vinson, Oklahoma Territory, where Dr. Walter Allen had opened a medical practice, but were forced to again relocate when most of the town—including their home—was destroyed in a fire initially caused by a tornado.

From 1904 to 1910, the couple shared a medical practice in the town of Content, in Runnels County, Texas, where they had an office with a small pharmacy adjoining their house. The rural setting required most of their practice to consist of house calls, first by horse and buggy, then bicycle, then motorcycle, and finally a small automobile. The Allens' first daughter, Frances Marion, was born during their time in Content.

In 1910, the Allens moved their practice a few miles east to Goldsboro, Texas, where their second daughter, Sheila Emery, was born; in 1912, they relocated again to Newark, Texas, about 20 miles northwest of Fort Worth.[1] In December 1913, the Allens were planning to move to China as missionaries when Walter died unexpectedly during surgery to remove kidney stones.[2][1]

Finding herself a widow at the age of 37, Dr. Daisy Emery Allen packed up her two young children and returned to Fort Worth. She served as clinical professor of children's diseases at Fort Worth Medical College until Fort Worth University closed in 1917 and its medical school, which had been chartered separately, merged with Baylor College of Medicine.[4] She entered a practice with two male physicians in the Fort Worth National Bank building, then opened her own office serving women and children in the new Medical Arts Building in 1931.

Dr. Daisy Emery Allen served on the staffs of Harris, All Saints, and St. Joseph hospitals in Fort Worth.[2] She also treated patients at free clinics at City-County Hospital and the Wesley Center, where she delivered many of Fort Worth's babies.[1] She was a founding member of the Fort Worth Academy of Medicine, a member of the Tarrant County Medical Society, the Tarrant County Association for Mental Health, the American Medical Women's Association, and was a life member of the Texas Medical Association.[2] She was also an early member of the Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce.

Dr. Daisy Emery Allen was a member of the League of Women Voters. She traveled extensively in the United States and Europe with her daughters and took them to political rallies. With her mother's influence, her daughter, Frances, became a social worker and pioneering advocate for child welfare in Texas and Illinois.[1]

Retirement and death

Dr. Frances Daisy Emery Allen retired from medicine in 1950, having practiced for more than half a century. She died of heart disease in Fort Worth on December 7, 1958[5] and was buried at Greenwood Cemetery in Fort Worth.[2] At her death, she owned extensive property in Runnels, Callahan, and Tarrant Counties, having accepted property in lieu of payment from patients.[1] She is noted on the Texas Historical Marker at the site of the Fort Worth Medical College, near the intersection of 4th and Jones Streets in downtown Fort Worth.[6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Silverthorne, Elizabeth; Fulgham, Geneva (1997). Women pioneers in Texas medicine (1st ed.). College Station, Texas: Texas A & M University Press. ISBN 9780890967898. OCLC 44957563.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Allen, Frances Daisy Emery". Handbook of Texas Online. 2010-06-09. Retrieved 2018-03-01.
  3. 1 2 "Alumni". The Lasso. Fort Worth University. May 1898.
  4. Grace & gumption : stories of Fort Worth women. Sherrod, Katie. Fort Worth, Tex.: TCU Press. 2007. ISBN 9780875653525. OCLC 104870146.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. Ancestry.com. Texas, Death Certificates, 1903-1982 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013.
  6. "Site of the Fort Worth Medical College". The Historical Marker Database. Retrieved 2018-03-06.
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