比迪·尤金·康纳医生的生活和工作:一位在种族隔离的德克萨斯州的非裔美国医生。

Keith Volanto
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1980年5月下旬,一个阳光明媚的日子,田纳西州纳什维尔的梅哈里医学院正在举行毕业典礼。250多名医生、牙医、护士、卫生管理候选人、牙科保健员和医疗技术人员准备从美国历史上第二古老的黑人医学院获得证书。身穿棕色华达呢套装的贝蒂·尤金·康纳博士准备和梅哈里大学1930届的一些老同学一起走上讲台,接受纪念50年公共服务的牌匾。当他走向领奖台的时候,泪水涌上了他的眼睛,因为他想到了他的母亲,他已故的妻子威利·鲁埃尔,他们的女儿乔治亚,以及他获得医学学位后的许多年。他的母亲会为他感到骄傲。这件事使这位退休医生产生了写自传的愿望。虽然从未完成,手稿的早期章节的草稿(连同其他现存的个人文件)为了解20世纪德克萨斯州一位重要的非裔美国医生的有趣生活提供了宝贵的窗口。康纳家族对教育的重视早在比迪出生之前就开始了。到目前为止,康纳博士最早的亲属是田纳西州东部布朗特县的威廉·康纳和雷切尔·斯特林·康纳。家庭记录显示,威廉于1814年出生在田纳西州诺克斯县的一个奴隶家庭。到1843年,他娶了雷切尔·斯特林,一个1829年出生在一个自由的黑人家庭的女人时,他已经获得了自由。内战期间,威廉和瑞秋住在布朗特县的一个农场里,养育了六个男孩和一个女孩。贝蒂·康纳的父亲大卫·亚历山大·康纳出生于1859年,是家中第四个长子。1866年威廉去世后,雷切尔把家搬到了路易斯维尔(布朗特县的一个社区,不要和肯塔基州的一个城市混淆了),在大卫和他最小的两个弟弟上学时,她在那里看家。到19世纪70年代末,这家人搬到了诺克斯维尔,后来分手分道扬镳。在大卫的兄弟姐妹中,他的妹妹成为了一名教师,两个兄弟担任牧师,一个兄弟成为了一名成功的殡仪馆老板,而他最小的弟弟乔治·谢尔曼·康纳(注定要成为小贝蒂的榜样),在德克萨斯州巴黎开始当老师,后来成为了一名医生和重要的社区领袖在韦科。2当大卫·亚历山大·康纳的双胞胎孩子贝蒂和比阿特丽斯于1902年7月8日出生在米勒县时,他的生活发生了很多变化。在阿肯色州红河沿岸的一个农场里。1900年,他在阿肯色州霍普市参加浸信会大会时遇到了福勒·纽林王后,她是一位矮小、美丽的法国和乔克托族妇女。经过简短的通信和求爱,两人于1901年结婚。女王在前一段婚姻中有5个孩子,因此比蒂和比阿特丽斯成为这个已经有11个兄弟姐妹的家庭中最小的成员。[]
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The Life and Work of Dr. Beadie Eugene Conner: An African American Physician in Jim Crow Texas.

[[On a bright, sunny day in late May 1980, commencement exercises were underway at Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee. More than 250 physicians, dentists, nurses, candidates in health administration, dental hygienists, and medical technicians prepared to receive their certifications from the second-oldest historically black medical school in the country. Wearing a brown gabardine suit, Dr. Beadie Eugene Conner prepared to be called up to the podium along with some former classmates of Meharry’s class of 1930 to receive a plaque commemorating fifty years of public service. As he made his way up to the podium, tears began to well up in his eyes as he thought about his mother who would be so proud of him, his deceased wife, Willie Ruel, their daughter, Georgia, and the many years that had passed since he received his medical degree. The event contributed to the retired doctor’s desire to write an autobiography. Though never completed, rough drafts of the manuscript’s early chapters (along with other existing personal documents) provide an invaluable window into the interesting life of an important African American physician in twentieth-century Texas.1 The Conner family’s emphasis on education started long before Beadie was born. The earliest relatives of Dr. Conner so far identified are William Conner and Rachel Sterling Conner of Blount County, in eastern Tennessee. Family records indicate that William was born a slave in Knox County, Tennessee, sometime in 1814. He had already purchased his freedom by 1843 when he married Rachel Sterling, a woman born in 1829 into a free black family. William and Rachel lived on a Blount County farm through the Civil War years, raising six boys and one girl. Beadie Conner’s father, David Alexander Conner, was the fourth oldest son, born in 1859. After William died in 1866, Rachel moved the family to Louisville (a community in Blount County not to be confused with the city in Kentucky), where she kept house while David and his two youngest brothers attended school. By the late 1870s, the family had relocated to Knoxville before breaking up and going their separate ways. Among David’s siblings, his sister became a schoolteacher, two brothers served as ministers, one brother became a successful mortician, and his youngest brother, George Sherman Conner (destined to become a role model for young Beadie), started out as a teacher in Paris, Texas, before becoming a physician and important community leader in Waco.2 Much had transpired in David Alexander Conner’s life by the time his twin children Beadie and Beatrice were born on July 8, 1902, in Miller County, Arkansas, on a farm along the banks of the Red River. A widower living with six children from his previous marriage, he had met Queen Fowler Newlin, a short, beautiful woman of French and Choctaw extraction while attending a Baptist convention in Hope, Arkansas, in 1900. After a brief correspondence and courtship, the two married in 1901. Queen had five children from her previous marriage, thus Beadie and Beatrice became the youngest additions to a family already containing eleven brothers and sisters...]]

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The Life and Work of Dr. Beadie Eugene Conner: An African American Physician in Jim Crow Texas. From the Midway to the Hall of State at Fair Park: two competing views of women at the Dallas Celebration of 1936. "All good things start with the women": the origin of the Texas Birth Control Movement, 1933-1945. One of the boys: Ammie Wilson’s challenge to postwar ideals of femininity on the stock show circuit. Fighting foot-and-mouth disease in Mexico: popular protest against diplomatic decisions.
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