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over the years, including
Franklin Hall (on Sixth Street below Arch Street), the Thirteenth and Arch Streets, then 419 Market Street. In 1857, it moved to Twelfth and Chestnut Streets, then three years later to 910 Arch Street. At the Arch Street home a
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Announcement and
Catalogue of the Penn Medical University of Philadelphia, Male and Female Departments, for 1857-58: With the Valedictory Address to the Graduating Classes, Delivered at the Public Commencement, held in the Musical Fund Hall, May 30th,
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was established. In 1874, the school moved to its final location at 1131 Brown Street. The school closed in 1881. In 1853 the school awarded the
Honorary Doctor of Medicine degree to
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The
Practical Importance of Female Medical Education: An Introductory Lecture, delivered September, 6th, 1853 in the Penn Medical College, of Philadelphia
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Midwife, Doctor, or
Doctress? The New England Female Medical College and Women's Place in Nineteenth-century Medicine and Society.
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to admit both men and women but they attended separate sessions (fall term for women, spring term for men).
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The Penn
Medical University catalog for the year 1860 lists 27 female graduates including Dr.
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but it was changed on
January 14, 1854, by decree of the Court of Quarter Sessions to
85:, often confused because, like Penn Medical University, it also admitted women.
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was founded by Dr. Joseph S. Longshore in 1853, but the name was changed to
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U.S., School
Catalogs, 1765-1935. Penn Medical University of Philadelphia.
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Extinct
Medical Schools of Nineteenth-Century Philadelphia
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Medical Department of the University of Pennsylvania
16:Former medical school in Philadelphia Pennsylvania
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33:The school held classes in several locations in
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186:Universities and colleges established in 1853
162:, Philadelphia, 1853. Retrieved 2016 May 11.
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107:Doctoral dissertation, Brandeis University.
125:, University of Pennsylvania Press. Print.
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69:The chartered name of the institution was
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26:in 1854. It was among the first
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121:Abrahams, Harold J. (1966).
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