•
Honoria Acosta-Sison, who graduated in 1909, was the first Filipino woman to become a medical doctor, eventually serving as professor of obstetrics and gynecology and head of the department at the
University of the Philippines. •
Ella Garber (Bauman), who graduated in 1924, was the founder of the Champa General Hospital in Champa, India. She served as a missionary there form 1926–1961. On returning to the US she served as director of Cancer Prevention at Allentown General Hospital. •
Rebecca Cole was the first black graduate of the Woman's Medical College to be awarded an MD in 1867. She was followed by
Caroline Still Anderson,
Eliza Ann Grier,
Matilda Evans, and Georgianna E. Patterson Young. •
Katherine Rotan Drinker (1888-1956), graduated in 1914, occupational hygienist with the Harvard School of Public Health •
Marie K. Formad (1860-1944), surgeon, gynecologist, and pathologist at Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania •
Sabat Islambouli, who graduated in 1890, was the first female physician from Syria. •
Mary Putnam Jacobi was a leading American woman medical scientist of the nineteenth century. •
Anandi Gopal Joshi, who graduated in 1886, was the first Indian woman doctor and one of the first
Indian women to practice Western Medicine in India. •
Gurubai Karmarkar, who graduated in 1892, was the second Indian woman doctor and missionary whose practice focused mainly on the most disenfranchised members of the Indian
caste system. •
Kei Okami, who graduated in 1889, was the first Japanese woman to obtain a degree in Western medicine. •
Jane Paine (1825–1882) graduated (first in her class) in 1861, the ninth graduating class of the Woman's Medical College. Her thesis addressed “A disquisition on women as physicians.” In 2018, a commemorative historical marker was placed in Mount Vernon, Ohio, where she practiced medicine. •
Susan La Flesche Picotte was the first Native American woman to earn a medical degree. •
Ann Preston, a member of the first graduating class of the WMCP and later became the first female dean of a medical school in the United States. •
Georgianna Rumbley •
Ellis Reynolds Shipp •
Laura Matilda Towne, who founded the
Penn School in 1862. •
Charlotte Yhlen, who graduated in 1873, became the first Swedish women to graduate from a medical school; she married pioneering engineer
Tinius Olsen Bernice R. Walters Nordstrom, who graduated in 1936, the first woman doctor to actually serve aboard a U.S. Navy ship. In the nineteenth century, the college admitted a number of Jewish students. == In popular culture ==