The First Female Doctor in WY Wasn’t Well Received…by Women
Lilian Heath. Such a demure name.
She was anything but.
In the 1880s, Lilian’s pa got her a job assisting Dr. Thomas Maghee, the physician
in the wide-open railroad town of Rawlins, WY. A petite little thing still in high school, Lilian was pretty fearless, but not stupid. She dressed like a man and carried a .32 when she went on calls late at night. She and the doc did everything from delivering babies to reconstruct a man’s face after his failed suicide attempt.
The nursing position set Lilian’s destiny. She graduated high school, and, with her father’s blessing and Dr. Maghee’s recommendation, headed off to the College of Physicians and Surgeons in Keokuk, Iowa. She was one of only three women in the class. After completing her training, she returned to Rawlins to practice medicine and was well-received … by the menfolk. The women in town were another story. Catty, and jealous, they whispered behind her back, accused her of being a know-it-all, a few even refused to pay Lilian for services rendered. Lilian’s mother Calista wasn’t thrilled with the vocation either, believing her daughter had over-stepped her bounds as a woman.
Maybe, but if a man lay dying of a gunshot wound 30 or 40 miles away, Lilian put on her big girl breeches and made the ride.
Clearly, being a trained female physician was a bad thing, because you could, you know, save lives.
Lilian met her husband, Louis Nelson, in Rawlins and they were married in 1898. He was a painter and a decorator. Go figure. Lilian practiced medicine for fifteen years and then quietly retired, though she kept her medical license current much, much longer than that.
Unfortunately, you can’t read any article about Lilian that doesn’t mention her “connection” to an outlaw. In 1881, while Lilian was still in high school and a candy-striper, for all intents, Big Nose George Parrot was lynched for murdering a deputy. When no one claimed the body, Doctor Maghee stepped up. Curious to see if the bandit’s brain was somehow deformed, he dissected the man’s head, in the name of science. Lilian assisted with the autopsy and was given Big Nose George’s skull cap as a souvenir. She kept it for years, using it for everything from a doorstop to a pipe holder.
Reporters loved to mention that story as if it was her greatest achievement.
My guess is, there were a few members of the press she would have liked to use as doorstops.
But she didn’t let the claws or the snipes get to her. Lilian never gave in, never backed down, never lost faith. I say thanks for paving the way!
Posted on February 20, 2019, in Ladies in Defiance and tagged amputee romance, christian romance, female physicians in the old west, first female doctor, first woman to, historical romance, legends of the old west, Lilian Heath, Old West History, old west legends, Romance, romance in the rockies, true romances, unsung heroines of the west, western history, western romance, Westerns, women and guns, women doctors, women in history, women in medicine, women of the old west, Women of the Wild West, women who settled the west, women who went west, Women who won the west, women's history, Wyoming History, Wyoming romances. Bookmark the permalink. 7 Comments.
This is interesting. Thanks for sharing. Good for her.
Did you catch that part about reconstructing the guy’s face? I read up on that. It was nothing short of a miracle. You may see something like that in the next book. No promises.
I can’t believe they reconstructed a guy’s face, that is crazy cool for their time. One of my favorite series is a female doctor in the 1880’s. She travels across the US via ship, experiences all the stigmas attributed to Lillian. Wow. thanks for sharing!
Kay, to what show are you referring? Not Dr. Quinn, right? Another one? Thanks for commenting!
Sorry, just now seeing this. The book series I referenced is Lynn & Gilbert Morris’s Cheny Duval, MD. One of my favorite series.
Not wanting anything job related to the medical field, I just wanted you to know this was an encouragement to keep at it and not give up on things that are important to me, but may be questionable to others. Thank you for this -and every-article. I enjoy them very much!
Jeannette Shields
Thank you, Jeannette! I appreciate ya, sister!