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Adaline Weed
Physician and women's rights advocate From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Adaline Melinda Willis Weed (1837–1910), known as Ada Weed, was an American hydropathic medicine practitioner and lectured on women's issues while advocating for women's rights.
Biography
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She was born Adaline Melinda Willis in Marion, Illinois in 1837.[1] She started at the New York Hygeio-Therapeutic college in 1856, and while there she met Gideon A. Weed whom she married in 1857. The wedding description in Water-Cure Journal indicates they both graduated and had their M.D. degrees, and they were "now united in hands, hearts, fortunes, and diplomas".[2] Following the wedding they moved to California where they planned to practice hydropathic medicine.[2] Weed would go on to publish about her experience with water-cures and travel.[3]: 72 Ada Weed would become the first female physician in Oregon.[4]
Weed was also known as an advocate for women's rights,[5] lecturing about the possibility of women being doctors and lawyers in 1858,[6] though the news about her lectures also raised comments from her as she did not agree with the portrayal of her words.[7] She also lectured on diseases specific to women.[8][9]
With her husband, they recruited patients in Sacramento, California[10][11] and Oregon.[12] The Weeds moved to Seattle in 1870,[13] where he would twice be elected mayor.[14] She stopped practicing medicine, became the director of the Library Association, and started hosting charitable events as a society lady.[15]
She died on September 8, 1910, in Berkeley, California.[16][1]
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Selected publications
- Weed, Adaline M.W. (March 1861). "Water-cure travel on the Pacific Coast". Water-Cure Journal. 31 (3): 40.
References
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