Susan l anderson biography

Read Edit View history. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Susan L Anderson. Susan Anderson had a career with many challenges in Fraser, Colorado, she did not attend medical school until the s. Susan's Friends.

Susan Anderson

For other people named Susan Anderson, see Susan Anderson (disambiguation).

American physician and doctor

Susan Anderson (January 31, – April 16, ) was an American physician and one of the first women to practice medicine in Colorado.[1]

Biography

Anderson was born in in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and later moved to Kansas.

Her parents divorced when she was young, and she lived with her father, younger brother, and grandmother. After she graduated from high school in , her family moved to Cripple Creek, Colorado after gold had been discovered there. Although she originally wanted to work as a telegraph operator, she was encouraged by her father to attend medical school at the University of Michigan.[1]

Anderson became a licensed physician after graduating from medical school in She returned to Cripple Creek before moving around Colorado in attempt to practice in Denver, Greeley and Eaton, but found it difficult to find work.[1][2] She was briefly engaged but was left at the altar by her fiancé in [3] In , she was appointed Coroner of Grand County, Colorado, during which time she investigated many of the deaths involved in the construction of the Moffat Tunnel railroad.[2]

After contracting tuberculosis in , Anderson relocated to Fraser, Colorado, where residents affectionately nicknamed her "Doc Susie"; for 49 years, she was the only physician in Fraser.[2][4] She tended to a range of patients and medical conditions including childbirth, skiing injuries, and particularly pneumonia during the flu pandemic.

Susan l anderson biography Susan's Friends. External links [ edit ]. Susan Anderson January 31, — April 16, was an American physician and one of the first women to practice medicine in Colorado. Biography [ edit ].

Although most of her work involved making house calls to patients, Anderson never owned a horse or car, and she was usually paid in food or firewood rather than money.[2]

During the s, Anderson was the focus of several newspaper and magazine stories. Actress Ethel Barrymore offered to make a film about Anderson's life, but the latter declined.[2] Anderson retired in and was admitted to Denver General Hospital with poor health in , where she stayed until her death; she died in , aged 90, and was buried in Cripple Creek.[3]

Anderson was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame in [2]

There are unsubstantiated claims that the television character hero of Dr.

Quinn, Medicine Woman is based on Doc Susie.[5]

References

  1. ^ abc"Susan Anderson, Mountain Doctor". Colorado Virtual Library. Colorado State Library.

    Louis, Missouri. American writer born In other projects. Colorado State Library.

    Retrieved June 1,

  2. ^ abcdef"Susan "Doc Susie" Anderson". Colorado Women's Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on June 2, Retrieved June 1,
  3. ^ abMichels, Kat (June 14, ).

    "Heroine of History – Susan Anderson: Care-taker for All". Business Heroine Magazine. Archived from the original on June 2, Retrieved June 1,

  4. ^""Doc Susie" of Fraser, Colorado". The Denver Post.

    Public campaign This page was last modified on 27 October , at Although most of her work involved making house calls to patients, Anderson never owned a horse or car, and she was usually paid in food or firewood rather than money. Susan's Friends. Biography [ edit ].

    July 11, Retrieved June 1,

  5. ^"Dr. Quinn, Doc Susie, and the Reality of Colorado's Women Doctors". issuu. Retrieved