Mildred Fay Jefferson | |
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Born | (1927-04-06)April 6, 1927 Pittsburg, Texas, U.S. |
Died | October 15, 2010(2010-10-15) (aged 83) Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Education | Texas College (BS) Tufts University (MS) Harvard University (MD) |
Political party | Republican |
Mildred Fay Jefferson (April 6, 1927 – October 15, 2010)[1] was an Americanphysician andanti-abortionactivist. The first black woman to graduate fromHarvard Medical School, the first woman to graduate in surgery from Harvard Medical School, and the first woman to become a member of the Boston Surgical Society, she is known for heropposition to the legalization of abortion and her work as president of theNational Right to Life Committee.
Born inPittsburg, Texas, Jefferson was the only child of Millard and Guthrie Jefferson, aMethodist minister, and aschool teacher.[2]: part 2 Her parents divorced before 1976 and lived inRoxbury after their divorce.[2]: part 2 Jefferson was raised inCarthage, Texas,[2]: part 2 [3] in theWesley-Calvinist tradition.[2] At a young age, "Millie" followed the town doctor around on his horse drawn buggy while he made housecalls, this would later inspire her to become a doctor.[2]
Jefferson married in 1963 to Shane Cunningham, whom she met on a skiing trip, a real estate manager.[2]: part 2 As of 1976, the couple lived inBack Bay and had no children.[2]: part 2
For elementary and middle school she attended public schools in East Texas. Later she earned herbachelor's degree a bachelor’s degree summa cum laude[4] and in three years fromTexas College.[2]: part 2 Since she was considered too young to attend medical school, she went toTufts University where she received hermaster's degree in biology. She then went on toHarvard Medical School and graduated in 1951, becoming the first black woman to do so.[3][5]
Mildred Fay Jefferson was the first African American woman to graduate from Harvard Medical School in 1951.[6] Her interests focused on medical jurisprudence, medical ethics, and particularly the societal and public policy impacts of combining medicine and law. She shifted to surgery during her first few years atHarvard Medical School and began clinical studies, and learned operational and surgical techniques. Two of her mentors—Dr. Carl Walter (the head of the surgical department) and Dr. David Hume (one of her professors, and the chief resident at the time)—gave her opportunities to put in extra time to advance her surgical skillset.[7] Being the hard worker she was, she used these extra hours to get ahead, and by the time she obtained an internship, her skillset was well prepared.
During Dr. Jefferson's third and fourth years atHarvard Medical School, she took a variety of courses including an elective in urology "because most people think that a woman doctor would not be strong in urology."[7]
Jefferson achievedboard certification in surgery in 1972.[2]: part 2 After graduating from medical school, she did a surgical internship atBoston City Hospital, becoming the first woman to do so. She was also the first female doctor at the formerBoston University Medical Center.[8] By 1984, Jefferson was ageneral surgeon at the center and a professor of surgery at theBoston University School of Medicine.[9] She would later become the first woman to become a member of the Boston Surgical Society.
According to Jefferson, one root of her opposition to abortion was her dedication to theHippocratic oath, which morally bound her to the preservation of life.[2] Her interest in abortion issues was triggered when she was asked to sign a petition opposing a resolution proposed by theAmerican Medical Association supporting liberalization of abortion-related laws.[2]: part 2
Her activism began in 1970, with a role in the board of governors onThe Value of Life Committee (VOLCOM).[10] In 1972, she left her role on VOLCOM to found theMassachusetts Citizens for Life (MCFL) and also helped found theNational Right to Life Committee (NRLC).[9] She became the vice president of the National Right to Life Committee in 1973 and then was elected as chairman of the board the following year. Dr. Jefferson then was elected as president of NRLC, serving three terms from 1975 to 1978.[5][11] She played a key role in all of these organizations by emphasizing the importance of preserving human life from conception to death. Jefferson concurrently wrote a column, "Lifelines", in theNational Right to Life News publication.[2]
As her activism career built up, and she became more entrenched in her work, her arguments began to be less medicinally based. Instead, they were grounded in her social justice beliefs. She served on the boards of more than 30 groups opposing abortion, euthanasia, human cloning, and embryonic stem cell research.[7] Within the black community Jefferson advocated for the pro-life cause by becoming a member ofBlack Americans for Life.[12]
In 1975, Jefferson was the first witness for the prosecution in themanslaughter case levied againstKenneth Edelin for his performance of a legal abortion.[2]
It was in 1980 that Jefferson helped theNational Right to Life Committee start a political action committee because she believed it was important to lobby and supportanti-abortion candidates for office. While a Republican, she helped DemocratEllen McCormack run for the Democratic Party presidential nomination in 1976. Apart from NRLC, Jefferson served on boards of directors of more than 30anti-abortion organizations.
Jefferson is also noted for changingRonald Reagan's stance on abortion from pro-choice toanti-abortion. He wrote to her in a letter, "I wish I could have heard your views before our legislation was passed. You made it irrefutably clear that an abortion is the taking of human life. I’m grateful to you."[13]
During her career in thepro-life movement, she was called anything ranging from a political opportunist to "dangerous," "anti-medicine," and "publicity hungry."[13] She had strong opinions when it came to topics such asabortion and was not afraid to voice them during speeches, rallies, and meetings for a variety of organizations.
In recognition of her efforts in medicine and pursuit of social justice during her life, she has received 28 honorary degrees from universities and colleges.[7] Although her career was largely successful, especially for her time, she couldn't pursue her career as a surgeon because of her identity as a woman of color and faced persistent discrimination. This led her to shift into the sphere of politics and make a lasting change through pro-life interest groups through the end of her life.
In her commitment to the right-to-life movement, she campaigned for anti-abortion candidates at the local, state, and national levels. Jefferson supported the single-issue,anti-abortion 1976 campaign ofEllen McCormack for president and appeared in television advertisements for McCormack.[2]
Jefferson was a self-described "Lincoln Republican" and served on the 1980Massachusetts Reagan for President Campaign. Jefferson had first met Reagan in 1973 while he wasgovernor of California.[9]: part 2 She also unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for the 1982,[5] 1990, and 1994U.S. Senate elections.[6] Although unsuccessful in all of these attempts, she continued to garner widespread fame and recognition nationally and internationally.
Though at first, she appeared to be a single-issue candidate at the head of the pro-life movement, as her role in politics expanded, she spoke out against a variety of topics includingbusing,social welfare programs,capital punishment, and theEqual Rights Amendment (ERA).[13] She held conservative political and social values, opposing theEqual Rights Amendment on the basis that it is unnecessary as the Constitution has no in-built inequity.[9] She for years called for aconstitutional amendment to reversethe 1973 Supreme Court decision inRoe v. Wade, rejecting the notion that abortion is a private matter between a woman and her physician.[5] Jefferson also expressed opposition towelfare andbusing, and support for thedeath penalty.[2]
Jefferson died in her Cambridge home on October 15, 2010, at the age of 83 years. She was divorced and had no children. She was buried in her hometown ofCarthage, Texas.