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Consuelo Clark-Stewart

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American physician
Consuelo Clark-Stewart
Consuelo Clark-Stewart as a medical student in Boston.
Born1861
DiedApril 17, 1910(1910-04-17) (aged 48–49)
Alma materBoston University School of Medicine
Occupationphysician
Known forThe first African American woman to practice medicine in Ohio
SpouseWilliam R. Stewart (married 1890)
FatherPeter H. Clark

Consuelo Clark-Stewart (July 22, 1860[1] – April 17, 1910) was an American physician and the firstAfrican American woman to practice medicine inOhio.[2]

For twenty years, Clark-Stewart ran a thriving medical practice inYoungstown, Ohio, where she treated both black and white patients.[3] She was the daughter ofPeter H. Clark, who is considered the first Blacksocialist, and the wife ofWilliam R. Stewart, one of the first Blackattorneys and elected representatives in Ohio. Her father and husband often overshadowed her accomplishments because of their own successes.

Early life

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Clark was born in Ohio in 1861, one of three children ofabolitionistPeter H. Clark and Frances Ann Williams Clark.[4] Her parents struggled financially, which caused them to move to eight different homes between 1858 and 1869.[4] She graduated fromGaines High School inCincinnati in 1879.[5]

Career

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After graduating from high school, Clark studied medicine privately with Dr.Elmira Y. Howard,[1] the first woman physician in Cincinnati. While she studied with Dr. Howard, she was studying art at the McMicken School of the Arts.[6] Clark later realized that her true calling was medicine[6] and obtained a place atBoston University School of Medicine,[7] graduating in 1884 after earning the highest honors on her final exams.[8] During her three-year study, she was the only black student in her class.[6] Clark was not only breaking barriers for women in medicine but also for black representation in medicine. After graduation, she returned to Ohio and worked at theOhio Hospital for Women and Children.

In 1890, Clark married attorneyWilliam R. Stewart.[4] Thereafter, she referred to herself as Dr. Consuelo Clark-Stewart. She moved with her husband to Youngstown, Ohio, where set up a private practice in medicine and treated both black and white patients. She did not discriminate anyone and that was why she became well-known in Ohio. Her reputation as a good doctor allowed her to break all kinds of barriers both within her career and her racial class. She was the first African American woman to practice medicine in Ohio which inspired and gave hope to women and African Americans.

In Youngstown, Clark-Stewart was active in theYWCA and in setting up freekindergartens.[7]

Death

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In 1907, Clark-Stewart's husband admitted her into the Ohio State Hospital for the Insane at Massillon, where she was declared insane.[9] Her diagnosis was based on the accusations she made of her husband being abusive toward her.[9] Her sister, Ernestine Clark Nesbitt, made the trip to Youngstown and spent two weeks gathering statements from doctors who declared Clark-Stewart sane.[9] These statements allowed for the discharge of Clark-Stewart, and newspapers reported that she was living with her sister in 1908.[9] However, the details of her release are not clear because the census in 1910 reported that she was still a patient at the mental health hospital, but she had died two weeks before the census took place.[9] Clark-Stewart died ofPernicious anemia on April 17, 1910, at the Youngstown City Hospital.[9]

References

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  1. ^abSanderson, Thomas W. (1907).20th Century History of Youngstown and Mahoning County, Ohio, and Representative Citizens. Chicago: Biographical Publishing Company. p. 337.
  2. ^Taylor, Nikki M. (2013).America's First Black Socialist: The Radical Life of Peter H. Clark. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky. p. 74.ISBN 9780813140773.
  3. ^"Clipped From The Salem News".The Salem News. 1908-01-25. p. 8. Retrieved2021-11-15.
  4. ^abc"Consuelo Clark".Colored Convention Heartland: Black Organizers, Women and the Ohio Movement. Retrieved2021-11-15.
  5. ^"Gaines High School".The Cincinnati Daily Star. 1879-07-01. p. 4. Retrieved2022-01-02.
  6. ^abc"Consuelo Clark, MD: The first Black woman licensed to practice medicine in Ohio | Walnut Hills Historical Society". 2023-07-19. Retrieved2025-11-30.
  7. ^abHorner, J. Richey, ed. (July 1910)."Obituaries".The Journal of the American Institute of Homoeopathy.II: 409.
  8. ^"The Banneker Club".Boston Evening Transcript. 1884-07-02. p. 1. Retrieved2021-12-29.
  9. ^abcdef"Gravesite of Dr. Consuelo Clark-Stewart - Pioneering physician with a tragic personal story".Cincinnati Sites and Stories. Retrieved2025-11-30.
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