Ella Patton was devoted to her patients, community

Ella Patton was born Oct. 18, 1860, in Shelbina, Mo. The family moved to Quincy, where her father was a mail clerk. She and her sisters spent their childhoods in Quincy, all graduating from Quincy High School.
The Patton family valued education, and the daughters attended college. Clara Patton was a teacher, and Marion Patton was a graduate of the University of Michigan and worked in state government in Arizona and Washington. After high school, Ella went to Gem City Business College. She then attended the Medical College of the University of Michigan where she received her doctoris in arte medica degree in June 1882.
Her first practice was in Rockford, where she received her physician registration from Illinois in July 1882. After two years, she moved to Tewksbury, Mass., and was first assistant physician and surgeon in the Tewksbury Alms House. Completing two years of service, she returned home to Quincy. By 1890, she lived at 223 N. Eighth and advertised her office at 225 N. Eighth, near the post office. She was listed as a physician and surgeon and even saw patients in her office on Sunday.
One newspaper account tells of her horse getting his bridle off while fighting flies in front of her office. "He dashed west through the alley, colliding with a telephone pole, turning the buggy over and smashing it up considerably and damaging the harness." Somehow he got loose from the buggy and was caught several streets away. Dr. Patton had to pay $50 in damages.
In May of 1891, Dr. Patton was invited to speak at the monthly Teachers' Institute in Quincy. Her topic was biology. The talk consisted of information on germ theory and the work of Louis Pasteur and other scientists. She talked about the importance of cleanliness and the "war on all dirt and all filth." She gave useful suggestions, which the school superintendent then used to remind teachers "that they could wield a strong influence in favor of cleanliness" with children.
Dr. Patton's primary practice was in obstetrics and gynecology, and, for three years, she was the physician to the Woodland Home for Orphans and the Friendless. She was president of the Adams County Medical Society in 1892 and was vice president under Abby Fox Rooney in 1895.
In addition to a thriving medical practice, she served on the Medical Board of Blessing Hospital. Adams County Medical Society members were elected by the membership to the Medical Board for six-month terms. She was the attending obstetrician and gynecologist in 1897, replacing Dr. Sarah Vasen. She continued to be on the staff of the hospital until granted a leave of absence for "rest and study" in 1898.
Dr. Patton took a deep interest in her profession and the community. Professionally, she was a member of the Quincy Medical and Library Association, American Medical Association, Illinois State Medical Society, Adams County Medical Society and Massachusetts Medical Society. Her social and philanthropic life was spent with Friends in Council, Quincy Women's Exchange, Local Council of Women in Quincy, Women's Christian Temperance League (where she was state vice president of the Narcotics Department) and a director of the Cheerful Home Association.
She was a member of the Unitarian Church, where "she was a promoter in every reform and a woman of advanced ideas and thought."
On Jan. 14, 1899, Dr. Patton left Quincy for Baltimore, where she was to take a postgraduate course at Johns Hopkins University. On her way there, she stopped to visit Quincy friends living in St. Louis. While there, she became ill. She requested to be taken to St. Luke's Hospital. The Quincy Daily Journal wrote, "In spite of the best treatment her condition grew worse and when it was seen that she could not live, her friend, Dr. Abby Fox Rooney was sent for."
Dr. Rooney was with her when she died Feb. 16, 1899, after an illness of three weeks. She was 38.
Dr. Patton had been in poor health for three years, of which most people but her closest friends were unaware. Consequently, her death was unexpected and widely mourned. When she died, a friend said of her, "The woman's cause has lost a staunch defender. She was a noble example of the possibilities of modern womanhood."
Her body was returned to Quincy, and her funeral was at the Unitarian Church, where the Rev. T.J. Horner officiated. His entire remarks were reprinted in the newspaper. As a tribute, he said, "She was always ready to respond to the call of misery. She had been known to go at midnight when the city physician had refused to go. She had faced smallpox unflinchingly. Abandoned wrecks of man's brutal selfishness found safety and comfort in her."
Irene Smith of the Women's Christian Temperance Union also spoke. The nurses from Blessing Hospital attended, as did the entire Adams County Medical Society. Two physicians were among her pallbearers. She is buried in Woodland Cemetery next to her three little brothers.
The Board of Lady Managers of the Executive Committee of the Charitable Aid and Hospital Association wrote resolutions in their minutes "of Respect and Condolence." "It has pleased the Great Architect of the universe to remove from our midst our co-worker ... and be it resolved, in the death of Dr. Patton, Blessing Hospital laments the loss of one, who was ever ready to proffer the hand of aid. …"
The Adams County Medical Society wrote in memoriam in its minutes stating, "By her death this Association loses a member whose professional attainments and womanly virtues had gained for her our highest respect. May the memory of her modest, unselfish noble life be an inspiration to us in our service to suffering humanity."
Arlis Dittmer is a retired medical librarian. During her 26 years with Blessing Health System, she became interested in medical and nursing history -- both topics frequently overlooked in history.
Sources:
Board of Lady Managers, "Minutes," (Quincy, IL, March 13, 1899).
"Ella M. Patton, M.D.," Quincy Daily Herald, Jan. 31, 1890.
"Death of Dr. Patton," The Quincy Daily Journal, Feb. 17, 1899.
"Dr. Ella Patton's Horse Ran Away," The Quincy Daily Herald, Sept. 18, 1895.
"In Memory," The Quincy Daily Journal, Feb. 27, 1899.
"Marion Patton, a Former Quincy Girl Receives Quite an Honor," The Quincy Daily Journal, Oct. 9, 1895.
Rook, Charles W., Montgomery E.B., Williams, W.W. In Memoriam. Quincy, IL: Adams County Medical Society, 1899.
"Teachers' Institute," The Quincy Daily Journal, May 24, 1891.
"The Medical Society," The Quincy Daily Herald, May 14, 1895.





