MARCH IS WOMEN’S History Month, and there’s no better time to celebrate the remarkable women who shaped the field of dentistry. Long before women were welcomed into professional schools or medical institutions, a handful of determined trailblazers fought their way in anyway. Here are three women who changed dentistry forever.
Lucy Hobbs Taylor wanted to be a doctor, but medical schools in the 1850s refused to admit women. She pivoted to dentistry and met the same walls. Undeterred, she apprenticed under a practicing dentist in Cincinnati, taught herself, and eventually built a thriving practice in Iowa entirely on her own terms.
After years of professional success, the Ohio College of Dental Surgery finally admitted her in 1865. She completed the program in just one year and graduated in 1866, becoming the first woman in history to earn a dental degree. Her classmates respected her so much that they escorted her to the stage during the graduation ceremony.
Taylor went on to practice alongside her husband in Kansas, where she also became a vocal advocate for women’s suffrage. She proved, irrefutably, that women belonged in dentistry.
While Lucy Hobbs Taylor fought for formal credentials, Emeline Roberts Jones was quietly doing the work. She began assisting her first husband, a dentist in Connecticut, and secretly practiced on extracted teeth at home to hone her skills. When he dismissed the idea of a woman practicing dentistry, she kept going anyway.
After her husband fell ill in 1855, she stepped in to treat his patients. He was so impressed that he eventually took her on as a full partner. When he died in 1864, she took over the practice entirely and ran it with exceptional skill.
Jones practiced dentistry for over 40 years, eventually treating more than 2,000 patients annually. She became one of the first women admitted to the Connecticut State Dental Society and later joined the American Dental Association. Her longevity and dedication made her one of the most accomplished dentists of her era, regardless of gender.
Ida Gray Rollins Nelson didn’t just become the first Black woman to earn a dental degree in the United States. She did it while navigating racism and sexism simultaneously, at a time when both were codified into nearly every institution she encountered.
She earned her Doctor of Dental Surgery degree from the University of Michigan in 1890 and went on to open a successful practice in Chicago. Her patients came from all backgrounds, and she served her community with distinction for decades.
Nelson also mentored other young women, encouraging them to pursue careers in dentistry and medicine. She understood that her success was not just personal. It was a door held open for everyone who came after her.
These three women persisted when the profession pushed back hardest. Their legacies live on in every dental school that welcomes students of all backgrounds today. This Women’s History Month, we celebrate them.
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