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Esther Pohl Lovejoy

Esther Pohl Lovejoy was an American physician and public health pioneer, suffrage activist, congressional candidate, and a central figure in early efforts to organize international medical relief work. In 1907, Lovejoy became the first woman appointed to direct a department of health in a major U.S city: the Board of Health in Portland, Oregon. Lovejoy worked on the women's suffrage campaigns in Oregon in 1906 and 1912, and founded the Everybody's Equal Suffrage League ahead of the 1912 election, when Oregon became the 7th state to grant women the right to vote. Lovejoy was among the founders of the Medical Women's International Association and was elected as its first president in 1919. Lovejoy ran for the U.S. Congress in 1920 as the Democratic candidate for Portland’s Third District but was not successful against the sitting Republican. She was awarded the Elizabeth Blackwell Medal by the American Medical Women's Association in 1951 and 1957 for contributions to the field of medicine. On July 21, 2012, the Century of Action Committee honored her and three other suffragists—Harriet Redmond, Harry Lane, and Martha Cardwell Dalton—by installing new headstones for them at the Lone Fir Pioneer Cemetery, where their initial headstones had become overgrown. The installation ceremony included costumed portrayals of the four suffragists and was attended by Barbara Roberts, a former Oregon governor. This event took place as part of the Century of Action Committee's year-long celebration of 100 years of suffrage for women in Oregon and as part of their efforts to call attention to remaining voting barriers for minorities.

Personal life
Esther Pohl Lovejoy was born Esther Clayson in a lumber camp near Seabeck, Washington, in 1869. Before graduating medical school on April 2, 1894, Esther became engaged to her classmate Emil Pohl. To honor her brother, Esther and Emil named their son Freddie, who was born in 1901, and Edward named his son Frederick H Clayson. After drinking contaminated milk and suffering from Septic Peritonitis, Freddie died in 1908 at 7 years of age. Following her son's death, Esther opened another private practice in Portland then pursued further training in Berlin in 1909. Her husband Emil stayed in Alaska for work, where he died in 1911 during an encephalitis epidemic. Esther re-married a Portland businessman named George A. Lovejoy in 1912; their marriage lasted 7 years, and they divorced in 1920. == Education ==
Education
Lovejoy was attracted to the field of medicine from a young age when she saw Belle Schmeer, a beautiful medical student at Willamette University, pass by her family's hotel every morning. As she walked to class, Lovejoy was constantly drawn to her professional and elegant aura. == Work outside of Oregon ==
Work outside of Oregon
Alaska Lovejoy's husband, Emil, and her brother, Fredrick Clayson, sailed to Alaska on July 30, 1897 to follow the discovery of gold. They were passengers on the George W. Elder, the first Portland ship that sailed to the Klondike region. The rest of Esther's family, consisting of her mother and three other siblings, followed in the coming year. After concluding her post graduate studies in Chicago in the spring of 1898, Esther also made the move to Alaska. While in Skagway, a cerebrospinal meningitis epidemic ensued; because there was no drug to treat the disease and no caretakers to monitor the patients, many fell victim to the disease. For the duration of the epidemic, both Esther and Emil used their medical school educations to provide care. After the epidemic ended, Esther moved back to Portland in June 1889 while Emil continued to follow the gold rush around Alaska and advertise his expertise as a physician. Europe Around the time of the birth of her son, Esther's mother and sisters moved back to Portland for school and work. Eventually Annie, Esther's mother, moved into her Portland home, allowing her to embark on a journey to Europe and Palestine in 1904; while in Vienna, she performed studies in various clinics. Annie gave Esther the opportunity to continue to practice medicine, be an advocate for women's suffrage, and a pioneer in the field of public health while also getting to be a mother. Lovejoy was very active during the First World War, where she used her efforts to study the effects of war and militarization on women. From 1917-1918, she traveled to France on the behalf of the Medical Women's National Association to study women and children in devastated areas. She found that many women were the victims of wartime violence in the form of rape, poverty, disease and dislocation. The war also sparked Lovejoy to publish a book and go on several speaking tours after traveling back to the United States; in her work, she advocated for equality between men and women through progressive action. While in France, she also worked with the Red Cross. == Boards and affiliations ==
Boards and affiliations
Portland Board of Health Lovejoy was appointed to the Portland Board of Health by Harry Lane, the mayor of Portland in 1905. She also authored a report that discusses impure milk and its effects on health and infant mortality, in addition to several other documents. Running for Congress Upon returning to Portland in 1920, Lovejoy decided to run for Congress as a progressive candidate against Clifton McArthur, the Republican incumbent. This was also the year that the 19th amendment to the US constitution, also known as the National suffrage amendment, was ratified. The first Red Scare was also rampant across the nation, causing the public to accuse Lovejoy of believing in Communism and supporting the Bolsheviks in the Russian Revolution. Lovejoy was still able to win 44 percent of the vote. Medical Women's National Association (MWNA) and American Women's Hospitals (AWH) In 1915, the Medical Women's National Association (MWNA) was established to advocate for women physicians; the organization utilized petitions, rallies and various other efforts to try and grant officer status to the women serving in the US Army Medical Corps. Lovejoy herself argued that women were already performing medical relief work, and that they were prepared and eligible to organize their official service in the war. Due to these efforts, the MWNA decided to establish a War Service Committee led by Dr. Rosalie Morton in June 1917. Subsequently, Lovejoy was appointed to be the chair of an additional committee on Maternity Service, which was established because maternity cases in areas of war were left to women physicians as a result of male physicians' service in the military. In 1918, members of the Medical Women's National Association voted to establish Lovejoy as their first Vice President. The following year, Lovejoy was asked to be the new chair of the American Women's Hospitals (AWH), formerly referred to as the War Service Committee. She then became the MWNA's acting president months later after Etta Gray, the president at the time, left to provide care in Serbia. She led the AWH from her first appointment in 1919 until dying in 1967. Under her guidance, the AWH had many objectives, one of which was to provide services in the public health sector in addition to establishing various orphanages and clinics in war-torn areas. During World War II in 1939, the AWH expanded their services by providing care in Greece, Britain and the Far East. The association ultimately provided service to victims of war in almost 30 different nations. Medical Women's International Association (MWIA) During the first World War, there were women physicians all over the world that were providing care in hospitals, clinics and volunteer organizations, no matter which side of the conflict their country was on. This prompted Lovejoy, acting president of the MWNA, to host an international conference that would allow women to share their stories and experiences. The conference was held in New York from September 15 to October 24, 1919; over 100 women physicians from 16 different nations were in attendance. Although they discussed a wide variety of topics, they were all centered around a common theme: women's health. At the end of the conference, Lovejoy and the MWNA held a reception dinner for the international medical personnel and the members of the AWH returning from service abroad. The guests continued to share stories of war and service from around the globe, leading to the formation of the Medical Women's International Association (MWIA). The group's goal was to allow medical women of varying nationalities to continue to serve and share their work with each other. Lovejoy was elected as the first president of the association, serving from 1919 to 1924. == Publications ==
Publications
After returning from France in 1918 and concluding her speaking tour, Lovejoy published a book titled The House of the Good Neighbor in 1919. The book described her trip to Europe and the work that she accomplished with the Red Cross and various charity hospitals. • Women Doctors of the World, published in 1957. • Certain Samaritans, published in 1927, which outlined the many accomplishments of the AWH in Europe and abroad. ==References==
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