QueerTheory.com
Books Used Books Book Series News Music Film Travel Shopping
Go Home!
Go Back! Search! Talk to Us!
Books!
 
Hi!
Histories Index
Francis Bacon
Jon Robin Baitz
Josephine Baker
S. Josephine Baker
James Baldwin
Alan Ball
Tallulah Bankhead
Benjamin Banneker
Ann Bannon
Samuel Barber
Barcheeampe
Clive Barker
Allen Barnett
Natalie Barney
Katharine L. Bates
Deborah Batts
Bruce Bawer
Sylvia Beach
Billy Bean
Amanda Bearse
Alison Bechdel
Aphra Behn
Bruce Bellas
Lisa Ben
Ruth Benedict
Michael Bennett
Jeremy Bentham
Gladys Bentley
A. Scott Berg
Ruth Bernhard
Sandra Bernhard
Leonard Bernstein
Allan Berube
Joan E. Biren
Elizabeth Birch
Becky Birtha
Elizabeth Bishop
Marie-Claire Blais
Carol Blazejowski
SDiane Bogus
Pat Bond
Rosa Bonheur
John Boswell
Ivy Bottini
Jane Bowles
Paul Bowles
Malcolm Boyd
Marion Z. Bradley
Adolf Brand
Beth Brant
Susie Bright
Benjamin Britten
Michael Bronski
Romaine Brooks
Nicole Brossard
James Broughton
Olga Broumas
Howard Brown
Margaret W. Brown
Rita Mae Brown
Victoria Brownworth
Bryher
Elly Bulkin
Charlotte Bunch
Glenn Burke
Raymond Burr
William Burroughs
Charles Busch
Judith Butler
Eleanor Butler
Dick Button
Spring Byington
Lord Byron
Hi!
Archives
Libraries
Legacy of Names
The Holocaust
Beat Generation
Stonewall
Notable Bisexuals
History Books
History Films
Coming Soon
Suggest a Name
Authors Index
Hi!
Names Index
Subjects Index
Authors Index
Site Index

Hi!
Histories Index
Academics
Arts
Bodies
Cultures
Futures
Identities
News
Places
Politics
Relations
Theories
Things
Find A Name
Find A Subject
Hi!

Films about Queer History

 

S. Josephine Baker (1873 - 1945)

Online Resources
Texts:  S. Josephine Baker
Texts:  Queer Histories
Texts:  Authors Index
Films:  Queer History
Used Books:  LGBT Studies
Add a Resource
Suggest a Name
      

      

Free Newsletter

Lesbian Almanac by the National Museum & Archive of Lesbian & Gay History

Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

Champion for Children's Health: A Story about Dr. S. Josephine Baker by Greg Ptacek, Lydia M. Anderson (Illustrator)

A biography of the doctor who, along with other achievements, was among the first to act on the idea that preventative medicine and health care for children is a function of government.

Gr. 3-5. With large type and several full-page black-and-white drawings, this is a simple biography of the doctor who pioneered public health care standards for children at the turn of the century. A dramatic opening incident describes how, as a privileged child, Baker once gave away all her party clothes, including her underwear, to a poor girl her own age. After that chapter, however, there's almost no sense of her personal life or individual complexity. The author focuses on Baker's public career and connects her work in children's health with her fight for women's rights. What emerges most vividly is a strong sense of the social conditions of the time: the city slums filled with new immigrants; the crowded, unsanitary conditions that caused infectious diseases to spread like wildfire. It's against this background that Ptacek sets Baker's work, both the daily drudgery with individual patients and the vision that established preventative health care as a necessity. -- Hazel Rochman

  Click here for more info  

Baker, S. Josephine (Sara Josephine "Jo" Baker) (1873-1945)
PHYSICIAN, PUBLIC HEALTH REFORMER

Raised in Poughkeepsie, New York, Baker became a medical doctor in 1898. She studied with Dr. Emily Blackwell and Blackwell's companion and colleague Dr. Elizabeth Cushier, at the Women's Medical College of the New York Infirmary for Women and Children. Upon the completion of an internship in Boston, Baker started a pediatrics practice in New York City while working as a medical inspector.

In her autobiography Fighting for Life Baker writes of the obstacles faced by women doctors in the early 20th century and the poor health conditions she found in New York City slums. In 1908 she established the municipal Division of Child Hygiene, the first agency of its kind in the world. Her work and the programs it inspired are credited with saving the lives of about 82,000 children between 1908 and 1923.

In addition to teaching, writing and serving on state and federal commissions, Baker represented the United States on children's health issues at the League of Nations.

In the 1930s she and her lover I.A.R. Wylie moved to Princeton, New Jersey where they were later joined by Dr. Louise Pearce. Later the three moved to a farm in Belle Mead, New Jersey.

Related Resources:

Health
Youth
Click HERE for Sources for the Biographies
Dr. S. Josephine Baker 

From gaygate.com

Excerpt:

Dr. S. Josephine Baker (1873-1945) Sara Josephine Baker was born on November 15, 1873 in Poughkeepsie, New York. Her father was a lawyer, and her mother had been in the first graduating class of Vassar College. When Baker was sixteen, her father died of typhoid which he had contracted from Poughkeepsie's drinking water. Discovering that the family finances were ruinous, Baker's mother nevertheless managed to pull together enough money to send her daughter to school, and in 1898 Baker received her MD from the Women's Medical College of the New York Infirmary for Women and Children. After a year's internship at the New England Hospital in Boston, she returned to New York to enter the practice of medicine, augmenting her meager income by working as a medical inspector for the New York City Health Department. Assigned to Hell's Kitchen and the midtown slums, she later wrote: "I climbed stair after stair, knocked on door after door, met drunk after drunk, filthy mother after filthy mother, and dying baby after dying baby." Alarmed by the high infant mortality rate in the city, in 1908 she established the Division of Child Hygiene, the first public agency in the world to address issues of children's health and a model for similar programs throughout the United States. At first male doctors refused to work with her, but eventually she won them over. Emphasizing the importance of preventative medicine, Dr. Baker introduced public school health programs, infant health clinics, and special schools designed to train midwives. In the first five years of the Child Hygiene Project, the infant mortality rate in New York City dropped from 144 per one thousand births to 105 per thousand births. By 1923...

 

Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

up

 

Click Here for Queer History Books

| Home | Bookshop | CFP | Add URLEmporium |

Associate PartnershipTLA Video Affiliate
In Association with the Philosophy Research Base at  erraticimpact.com
Web Design Copyright © 2000 by queertheory.com