Cleora Augusta Stevens Seaman

Cleora Augusta Stevens Seaman (June 9, 1814 – July 10, 1869) was an American physician based in Cleveland, Ohio.

Cleora Augusta Stevens Seaman
Cleora Augusta Seaman, from a 1921 publication
Born1814
Died1869
OccupationPhysician
Spouse
John Farmer Seaman
(m. 1833)
Children7
RelativesWilliam Seaman Bainbridge (grandson)
William Sims Bainbridge (great-great-grandson)

Early life and education

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Stevens was born in Middlebury, Vermont, and raised in Rochester, New York, the daughter of Levi Stevens and Lucy Boynton Stevens.[1] In midlife, she pursued a medical education at Western College of Homeopathy in Cleveland, the only program in Ohio where she could gain admission as a woman. She received her medical degree in 1860, the only woman in her class.[2]

Career

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After earning a medical degree, Seaman opened a free dispensary from her home in Ohio,[3] and experimented with combining electricity and hydropathy in her work.[2] In 1867 she was co-founder with Myra King Merrick of the Cleveland Homeopathic College and Hospital for Women.[4] She was the college's first president.[5]

Personal life and legacy

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Cleora Stevens married John Farmer Seaman in 1833. They had seven children.[6] Cleora Stevens Seaman died in 1869, at the age of 55, at her daughter's home in Providence, Rhode Island.[1][7]

Her daughter Lucy Seaman Bainbridge became a nurse in the American Civil War, and a temperance leader;[8] she wrote about her mother's work in a 1921 journal article, "One of the Pioneer Women in Medicine".[2] She also wrote about her mother in a memoir, Yesterdays (1924).[3] Cleora Seaman's descendants include surgeon William Seaman Bainbridge (Lucy's son) and sociologist William Sims Bainbridge (Lucy's great-grandson).[9]

References

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  1. ^ a b De Forest, Louis Effingham (1950). Ancestry of William Seaman Bainbridge. Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center. Oxford : Scrivener Press, 1950.
  2. ^ a b c Bainbridge, Lucy Seaman (March 1921). "One of the Pioneer Women in Medicine". Medical Woman's Journal. 28: 75–78.
  3. ^ a b Bainbridge, Lucy Seaman (1924). Yesterdays. Fleming H. Revell Company.
  4. ^ Cole, Kimberly. "Pioneering Women Doctors". Cleveland Historical. Retrieved 2023-04-06.
  5. ^ Cleveland Homeopathic College and Hospital for Women (1868). Annual Announcement. Leader Book and Job Office.
  6. ^ Bainbridge, William Sims (2018-11-02). Family History Digital Libraries. Springer. pp. 56–58. ISBN 978-3-030-01063-8.
  7. ^ "Personal". The Ohio Medical and Surgical Reporter. 3: 206. November 1869.
  8. ^ "Lucy Bainbridge". History of American Women. 2006-10-21. Retrieved 2023-04-06.
  9. ^ Cassidy, Joseph (1965-05-15). "Three Socialites Die in Blaze". Daily News. p. 58. Retrieved 2023-04-07 – via Newspapers.com.