Charlotte Ferguson-Davie
Charlotte Elizabeth Ferguson-Davie OBE (1880 – 24 March 1943) was a British physician and the founder of the St. Andrew's Medical Mission and the St. Andrew Mission Hospital, the first women's and children's clinic in Singapore. BiographyFerguson-Davie was born in Essex, the daughter of Irish geologist Edward Hull, and she went on to become a medical doctor.[3][4] In 1902, she married the Anglican Right Reverend Charles James Ferguson-Davie.[4] Ferguson-Davie and her husband came to Singapore in 1909.[5] Prior to coming to Singapore, she had worked in India as a medical missionary.[6] In 1913, she helped create the St. Andrew Medical Mission in order to help care for the "poor and disadvantaged."[7] She opened a second clinic in 1914.[8] In 1921, she published a book, In Rubber Lands: An Account of the Work of the Church in Malaya.[4] In 1923, she created the first women's and children's clinic in Singapore, named the St. Andrew's Mission Hospital (SAMH).[9] She was able to obtain the land and get architects to work for her for almost "nothing."[10] The next year, in 1924, Ferguson-Davie expanded the services that SAMH provided, including a venereal disease clinic.[4] Ferguson-Davie set up training classes, teaching nursing and midwifery.[4] Ferguson-Davie became an officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1927 and in the same year, retired.[4] She and her husband then moved to South Africa, where he worked at Fort Hare College.[4] Ferguson-Davie died in 1943.[4] LegacyFerguson-Davie was recognized for her medical work during the St. Andrew's Cathedral's Thanksgiving service in 2013.[10] In 2014, she was inducted into the Singapore Women's Hall of Fame.[4] References
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