Female physician's career didn't last long

Susan Baxter Jarrett (1874-1960) was the daughter of Anna Bywater and James Jarrett. Anna (1839-1915) was from Wales, moving to the United States as a young child. Her family farmed in Ellington Township. James (1839-1900) was born in Scotland and came to the United States in 1861. The Jarrett family had one son and six daughters. Susan and her twin sister, Agnes Mildred, graduated from Quincy High School in June 1894.
Commencement was held at the Empire Theater with 31 graduates and over 1,600 people attending the ceremony on "…the hottest [day] of the year…" according to the Quincy Daily Herald.
The ceremony began at 9 a.m., and the only male member of the class was unable to attend because of the death of a relative. The 30 girls all wore white gowns, kid gloves and slippers, and were arranged in a semicircle on the stage with each performing a musical number or a reading. Susan was described as "a girl with classic Grecian features…" She recited a piece of Act V, Scene III of Shakespeare's "The Winter's Tale."
Later in 1894 she began studying medicine informally in Quincy in preparation for entering medical college in 1895. She attended the University of Michigan Medical College in Ann Arbor. Michigan was the first state medical college to accept women on an equal basis with men, graduating women beginning in 1870.
The Quincy newspapers recorded her coming home between semesters, entertaining her friends at the family home at 1870 Grove Ave., but mention little else about her studies, graduation or career.
All of the sisters were accomplished and were members of a variety of charitable and civic organizations in Quincy. Agnes was a teacher at Madison School and accompanied Susan back to Ann Arbor for summer courses in June 1899.
Susan's mother, Anna Jarrett, and Dr. Abby Fox Rooney traveled to Michigan for her graduation in June 1900. Dr. Rooney's son Henry was a medical student at the university, graduating a few years after Dr. Jarrett and by 1904 was working in a Buffalo, N.Y., hospital. Dr. Rooney presented Susan with a set of four surgical instruments with tortoise shell handles as a graduation present. Those instruments were given to the Historical Society in 1972 and are on display.
After graduating at age 26, Dr. Jarrett returned to Quincy to practice medicine. By September 1900 she was living on north Eighth near Spring with her sister and brother-in-law Annie and Frank Wood.
Both Dr. Jarrett and Dr. Rooney helped Mary Bull when she opened the Kitchen Garden in June 1901 "... for the benefit of colored children…" The "vacation school" was located on north Eighth and met three days a week. Dr. Rooney would talk to the children on "How to Keep Well," and Dr. Jarrett on physiology and also about flies and mosquitoes as carriers of disease.
In October 1901, Dr. Jarrett was appointed to the Medical Board of Blessing Hospital as attending obstetrician. Appointments were made for six-month terms. When the medical staff met again in April 1902, her appointment was as an anesthetizer, which was the term used at the time for an anesthesiologist. At the October 1902 meeting, she was again appointed attending obstetrician. In April 1903 she became consulting obstetrician. Here, her appointments ended as she married Loren Butler Seymour of Payson on Aug. 19, 1903, in her family home. From then on, any mention of Dr. Susan Jarrett in the local newspapers was as Mrs. Loren Seymour.
Loren Seymour (1869-1960) was the son of Charles Seymour and Emily Kay of Payson. He was a graduate of Knox College and worked as the secretary of Empire Light Co., which merged and became the Quincy Gas Light and Coke Co. Their wedding trip in 1903 to Southern California was supposed to last one month. They liked the state so much they decided to stay, eventually settling in Pasadena. The Dec. 16, 1903, Quincy Daily Journal described them as "nicely situated in Los Angeles."
A little over a year later, Dr. Jarrett's sister Agnes married Lyman Kay Seymour, Loren's brother. They also took a wedding trip to the West Coast but returned home and lived in the Fall Creek area of Adams County.
Loren and Susan Seymour returned to Quincy quite often, according to various newspaper accounts of their visits, combining one such trip with the St. Louis World's Fair. They also entertained many Quincyans who vacationed in Southern California. In 1904, her friend Dr. Abby Fox Rooney moved to California to be near her son, Dr. Henry Rooney. and frequently socialized with the Seymours.
The Impressions and Reflecting column written by the Eternal Feminine in the Oct. 11, 1917, Quincy Daily Journal is about the "Jarrett twins." The column glowingly describes the women and laments the move of Susan to Southern California: "And in the return to the old home of Mrs. Loren Seymour, there has been brought to Quincy not only the gracious presence of a most winsome woman, but the joy of a reunion of friends -- and, incidentally, the regret that a home town always feels when it realizes that one of its bright lights is now shining in another clime -- a regret, of course, always softened by the thought of another's gain. And southern California, by the way, is just full of Quincy's losses."
The Seymours lived in South Pasadena from 1910 to 1940. They were listed as having no occupation in census records with one servant living in the home. Because of his business acumen and several inheritances, they were wealthy.
Susan and Loren Seymour were married 57 years, dying within one month of each other. They are buried in Glendale, Calif. The couple had no children. There is no record of Susan practicing medicine after her marriage. Her medical career lasted only three years.
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:
"Bradfords and Irwins," Quincy Daily Journal, April 20, 1909.
"Charles Seymour," Quincy Daily Journal, Oct. 11, 1898.
"Driftwood Caught in Local Currents," Quincy Daily Whig, Nov. 6, 1903.
Eternal Feminine, "Impressions and Reflections," Quincy Daily Journal, Oct. 11, 1917.
"Forty Pupils The First Day," Quincy Daily Whig, June 25, 1901.
"Greeting of Graduates," Quincy Daily Herald, June 14, 1894.
"Local News," Quincy Daily Journal, Nov. 17, 1904.
"Local and General News," Quincy Daily Journal, June 2, 1899.
"Local and General News," Quincy Daily Journal, June 13, 1900.
"Quincy Folks in Los Angeles," Quincy Daily Journal, Dec. 16, 1903.
"Quincyans In Los Angeles," Quincy Daily Herald, July 24, 1915.
"Strictly Personal," Quincy Daily Herald, Sept. 15, 1900.
"Susan Baxter Jarrett." Ancestry.com. http://person.ancestry.com/tree/47794927/person/20327592161/facts
"To Be Married September 28," Quincy Daily Journal, Sept. 15, 1904





