By Caroline Clemmons
I’ve enjoyed
Angela Rains posts on early women doctors in Colorado. She always posts
interesting information. So, copying her, I intended to highlight early women
doctor in Texas. I’ve done enough
genealogy to know that the story family passes down, frequently gets convoluted
into something else. My intention was to feature the sister of someone who
married into my father’s family.
The family story
is that Necolena “Lena” Snedal McCrarary was one of the first women osteopaths
in Texas and the first one to practice in North Central Texas. Following the
birth of her children, she moved to Beeville, Texas, where she and another
doctor purchased on old hotel and turned it into a hospital and clinic. When
her daughter Evalyn joined her and the other partner retired, Lena and her
daughter continued to operate the hospital and clinic. Finding corroborating
records has been… not easy.
Here’s what I
found instead:
In Beeville, Texas, Dr. Christian Bors-Hall,
an osteopathic physician and surgeon, purchased the old Thurston Hospital on
January 1, 1944, and operated it under the name of Bors Clinic. In 1958, Dr.
Evalyn Kennedy, daughter of Dr. Lena McCraray (both osteopathic physicians and
surgeons), bought the clinic and is presently operating the business. (Dr. Evalyn McCrarary Kennedy died in 2002.) An
earlier osteopathic physician here was Dr. Catherine Compton, and when she
moved to San Antonio in 1927, Dr. McCraray took over her patients.
What I think I know is this:
Nicolena Snedal was born 17 May 1879 to
Andrew/Andreas and Guru Anna Snedal, who had come from Frosta, Norway, two
years earlier. Lena graduated in 1905 from A. T. Still’s American College of
Osteopathic Medicine in Kirksville, Missouri. She first practiced medicine in
Hardeman County between Quanah and Vernon, Texas.
In 27 February 1908, she married Dozier Alonzo
McCrarary. They became the parents of twin girls in 1909,Lena Rivers McCrarary
and Elizabeth W. McCrarary. In 1910 Troy Bivens McCrary was born. Evalyn
Blanche McCrary was born in 1920. Lena moved to the coastal area of Bee County,
where her brother Haakon Snedal lived. Soon, she divorced her husband.
In Beeville, she established a very successful
medical practice. Eventually, her daughter Evalyn joined her practice. Lena
continued to practice medicine until shortly before her death in 1961.
Osteopathic Medicine
Beginning as a reformation movement in search of an
alternative to standard medical practice, osteopathy claims a formal beginning
in 1874 with Andrew Taylor Still, MD, DO. A frontier physician known as the
“Father of Osteopathy,” Dr. Still served an apprenticeship under his father and
referred to himself as a licensed frontier physician (MD) and went on to
establish the American School of Osteopathy in Kirksville, Missouri.
While medical
schools and male medical doctors were (in general) still resistant to female
doctors, osteopathic medicine (in general) accepted women.
Early nineteenth century osteopathic philosophies,
such as shifting the treatment of medical conditions away from prescription
medicine and focusing on utilizing a whole body approach to treatment, are
widespread in current health care practices. Publications of pamphlets and
postcards from these early years showcase fundamental osteopathic principles
and provide historical references about the practice of osteopathic physicians
and early osteopathic hospitals, infirmaries, and sanitariums. Preservation of
these physical artifacts extends the collective record of medical history and
lays the foundation for current osteopathic medical practices.
In these early years, osteopathic
information was circulated by way of pamphlets, leaflets, and brochures. The
archives in the Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences D’Angelo
Library contain pamphlets and postcards that predate or are contemporary to the
first published osteopathic medical history. These early publications have been
designed with striking illustrations and photographs and describe new (at the
time) medical theories such as the interrelated nature of bodily systems and
musculoskeletal treatment techniques (e.g., osteopathic manual manipulation),
with an overall emphasis on wellness and disease prevention.
Dr. Stanhope Bunting became a
pioneer for disseminating early osteopathic information. He became impressed
with Dr. Still’s movement after travelling to Kirksville, Missouri, to write a
story for a Chicago newspaper in the mid-1890s. He eventually enrolled in the
school and graduated in 1900, setting up a practice in Chicago and beginning
two monthly publications, Osteopathic
Physician for the practitioner only and Osteopathic
Health for the general public. These publications
document historical philosophies and practices of osteopathic medicine.
Sources:
Ancestry.com
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