Hurd-Mead was the eldest of three children born to Edward Payson Hurd, a practicing physician, and Sarah Elizabeth (Campbell) Hurd. In 1870, the family moved to
Newburyport,
Massachusetts, where she attended public schools. She also helped to organize the Middletown District Nurses Association (1900), was vice president of the State Medical Society of
Connecticut (1913-1914), president of the
American Medical Women's Association, and organizer of the
Medical Women's International Association (1919). At a meeting of the
Johns Hopkins Historical Club in 1890 she had become interested in the
history of women physicians. She conducted extensive research and published
Medical Women of America (1933) and in 1938 the first comprehensive history of women's role in medicine,
A History of Women in Medicine: From the Earliest of Times to the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century. She argued strongly for the real existence of
Trotula, the Sicilian woman physician of the
Middle Ages, who some historians had tried to argue was not a real person but a name for a collection of works. Hurd-Mead is also responsible for creating the myth of
Mother or Mrs Hutton and William Withering. The section on this in her book is unreferenced and appears to have been taken from a 1928 Parke Davis advertising blurb without being thoroughly checked. The purported history in that advertising blurb was false. No such person existed yet many have taken details from Hurd-Meads book and embellished it with details of their own making. Her creation of Mrs. Hutton has been raised and questioned by J. Worth-Estes, Dennis Krikler and others. Similarly, she invented an ancient Egyptian female doctor known as "
Merit-Ptah," for whom there is no real evidence. Hurd-Mead died at the age of 73 in a
bushfire near her home while trying to assist her caretaker who also died in the fire. ==References==