![]() ![]() In 1901 Elsie M Inglis, 36, physician and surgeon, was living at 8 Walker Street in Edinburgh. National Records of Scotland, 1891/685-4/74, page 6 In 1891 Elsie M Inglis, 26, medical student, was living with her father, now a widower at 16 Chalmers Street in the district of St Giles, Edinburgh.ġ891 Census record for Elsie Inglis (38 KB jpeg) Her father, John, had retired from the Bengal Civil Service.ġ881 Census record for Elsie Inglis (19 and 21 KB jpegs) They are all recorded as British subjects. Her mother, Harriet, sister Eva and brother Horace were also born there. In 1881 Eliza Inglis, 16, scholar, was living with her family and three servants at 10 Bruntsfield Place in Edinburgh The census record for the district of Newington is over two pages and gives her place of birth as India. Her funeral was held in Edinburgh and she was buried in the city’s Dean Cemetery. ![]() ![]() She died in Newcastle on 26 November 1917. ![]() She served in Serbia and then Odessa but had to return home because of ill health. She established the first maternity hospital staffed by women in 1901 but it was her founding of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Foreign Service during the First World War that made her famous. Elsie Inglis played an important role in the Scottish Federation of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |