People, Locations, Episodes

Mon, 05.13.187213

Matilda Evans, South Carolina Doctor born

Matilda Evans

On this date in 1872, we celebrate the birth of Matilda Evans, a Black surgeon and administrator.

Matilda Arabelle Evans was the oldest of three children born to Harriet and Andy Evans from Aiken County, South Carolina.  As a Scholfield Normal and Industrial School student, she became a protégé of the school's founder, educator Martha Scholfield.  Evans attended Oberlin College in Ohio before enrolling at the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania to earn a medical degree.  She then returned to South Carolina to practice surgery, gynecology, and obstetrics. Evans opened her medical practice in Columbia, which, at that time, offered no hospital facilities for Blacks.

With generosity, Evans took patients into her home until she could establish a hospital.  In 1901, she established the Taylor Lane Hospital and a training school for nurses. The hospital was later destroyed by a fire that led to another hospital before moving to a larger facility named the St. Luke's Hospital and Training School for Nurses. In 1918, she became a registered volunteer in the Medical Service Corps of the United States Army.  She also founded the Good Health Association of South Carolina to help convince people that they could improve their health by following sound health practices and safe, sanitary habits.

Charity, compassion, and a love of children were the hallmarks of  Dr. Evans' career; she charged only nominal fees. She rode bicycles, horses, and buggies to visit the sick who could not go to her surgery. She provided for school physical examinations and immunizations, which saved countless young children's lives. In 1930, she operated a free clinic for Black children who needed medical treatment and vaccinations. Evans found the time to raise 11 children who needed a home.


Dr. Evans' Home/Office

In addition to becoming a "mother" to some of the children left at her practice, she brought up five children from relatives who had died. She taught the children to respect, cleanliness, and manners and allowed them a college education. Young and old people enjoyed the facilities she shared at a recreational center that she developed on her 20-acre farm.

Evans was an active member of St. Luke's Episcopal Church. She loved swimming, dancing, knitting, and playing the piano. Richland Memorial Hospital in Columbia, S.C., has named an award in her honor.

The first Black woman to be licensed as a physician in South Carolina, Matilda Evans, died in 1935.

to become a doctor

Reference:

SC African America.com

CF Medicine.NLH.gov

The Encyclopedia Britannica, Twenty-fourth Edition.
Copyright 1996 Encyclopedia Britannica Inc.
ISBN 0-85229-633-0

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We raise de wheat, Dey gib us de corn: We bake de bread, Dey gib us de crust; We sif de meal, De gib us de huss; We peel de meat, Dey gib us de skin; And... WE RAISE DE WHEAT by Frederick Douglass.
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