Physician blazed trails here and in California

Sarah Vasen, born in Quincy in 1870, was probably the first Jewish female physician in Illinois. She was the seventh child of nine and the only daughter of Gerson (George) Vasen and Catherine Eschner Vasen, who married in Philadelphia in 1856 and moved to Quincy in 1867. Gerson was born in present-day Germany and was initially in the hide business in Quincy, later moving into real estate and insurance. Catherine was born in what is now the Czech Republic and devoted herself to her large family.
Sarah Vasen attended public school in Quincy until she was 16 and then studied medicine privately for two years with Dr. Melinda Knapheide Germann, one of Quincy’s first female doctors. In 1890 Vasen enrolled in the Keokuk (Iowa) College of Medicine. After graduating on March 8, 1892, she returned home and began practicing medicine from the family residence, at 523 Chestnut. When the Adams County Medical Society met on Aug. 13, 1894, Vasen was the secretary.
She must have been inquisitive with an independent streak. The typical path for a woman like her would have been to marry, raise a family and be an active clubwoman like her sister-in-law, Julia Eschner Vasen. As an officer of Quincy’s Hebrew Ladies’ Benevolent Society, Julia visited destitute Russian Jewish families to assess their needs, while Sarah Vasen treated their medical conditions. Both women participated in Quincy’s nonsectarian Woman’s Council, which in the 1890s focused on “The New or Preventative Philanthropy.” Julia Eschner Vasen was on the Board of Lady Managers of Blessing Hospital at the time that Sarah Vasen was on the staff.
Sarah Vasen was the first female to receive an appointment at Blessing Hospital. The Quincy Herald described her as “a rising young physician, fully competent to take charge of the position” of head of the Blessing Hospital maternity ward. An 1895 report by Blessing Hospital noted that its maternity ward was “the only shelter in Quincy open to destitute women in their hour of need. Many a deserted wife and deceived girl has been received and tenderly cared for in her extremity.” Nearly all women still gave birth at home attended by a midwife, but the hospital claimed that “well-to-do matrons” also used the maternity ward, “thus securing the best care at less cost than at home.”
Shortly after her mother died in 1897, Sarah Vasen moved to Philadelphia, where two uncles lived. She enrolled in postgraduate training in obstetrics and became the superintendent and physician of the Jewish Maternity Home. Established and supported by Jewish women in Philadelphia, the home cared for Philadelphia’s poor Jewish mothers as well as babies who were sick or had lost their mothers. Vasen trained many nurses during her two years in Philadelphia, and during her tenure, the home was modernized and acquired an incubator and sterilizer.
Vasen resigned her post and returned to Quincy in 1900, resuming her private practice and specializing in diseases of women and children. In 1901, she was reappointed to the staff of Blessing Hospital, where she was obstetrician and gynecologist, even serving a six-month stint in charge of the entire hospital. She was better qualified for her work in Quincy after her experience in Philadelphia treating patients with new approaches, training nurses and handling fiscal matters. However, in Philadelphia she had needed to take a leave of absence from her job due to illness, and back in Quincy she was suffering from a painful dermatological problem, probably psoriasis. After being a patient in Blessing Hospital for a few weeks, she consulted a skin specialist in Chicago. Either on her own volition or on the advice of this doctor she visited her brother Nathan in California in January 1905. By March 15, she had decided to live permanently in Los Angeles.
Upon arriving in Los Angeles, Vasen, who now was the first Jewish female physician practicing in that city, went to work at the Kaspare-Cohn Hospital, recently opened through the beneficence of a wealthy Jewish businessman and the Hebrew Benevolent Society. Initially, care was rendered free, and most patients suffered from tuberculosis. From 1906 to 1910, Vasen lived at the hospital and supervised its operation. Soon the hospital had an incubator and was equipped to treat mothers and infants. When a new, expanded hospital moved too far from the city center for her, Vasen resigned her position in 1910.
She then opened her own practice dedicated only to maternity patients and charged no fees to poor women who were recommended by the Hebrew Benevolent Society. In 1911 she moved her office and home to an area where the city’s Jewish elite lived, and they became her clientele. Living at the same address, 1110 Pico Blvd., was a 56 year-old Dutch Jew, Saul Frank. At age 42, Sarah Vasen retired from medicine and married Saul, eventually moving to Glendale, Calif. Vasen’s life with Saul ended tragically when he died of a heart attack in 1924. Sarah lived alone in her home for nearly 20 years until her death on Aug. 21, 1944.
Sarah Vasen’s legacy rests in both Quincy and Los Angeles. In both places she was the first Jewish female physician. In the case of Quincy, she helped build up the maternity ward at Blessing Hospital, while in Los Angeles her tireless work at Kaspare-Cohn Hospital made it such a success that it eventually became Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. Her concern for the poor in both places knew no bounds.
Cynthia Francis Gensheimer is an independent scholar. She holds a doctorate in economics and is writing a book about the history of Quincy’s Jewish women’s benevolence. She is the author of an article about a woman from Quincy: “Annie Jonas Wells: Jewish Daughter, Episcopal Wife, Independent Intellectual,” published in American Jewish History.
Dr. David Frolick is a Quincy native who received most of his education here. After receiving a Ph.D. from American University, he taught political science at North Central College for 36 years, retiring in 2007. He now lives in Columbus, Ohio, and continues his research on the history of life in Quincy.





