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Emma
Constance Stone (1856-1902), medical officer and feminist, was born
on 4 December 1856 at Hobart, Tasmania, the oldest child of English
parents Betsey (born Haydon) and William Stone, organ builder. She
was educated at home. The family moved to St Kilda, Melbourne, about
1875 where she ran a small family school until 1884, when she left
for the United States to study medicine. (Women had been admitted
to the University of Melbourne since 1880, but were excluded from
medicine because the subject matter was considered inappropriate
for mixed classes.) Stone graduated from the Woman's Medical College
of Pennsylvania and, to ensure registration in Australia, obtained
an MD from the University of Trinity College, Toronto, Canada, and
the Licentiate of the Society of Apothecaries, London. While in
London she worked at the New Hospital for Women and Children, founded
by Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, which was officered only by women.
In February 1890 Dr Constance Stone became the first woman to be
registered with the Medical Board of Victoria and opened practice
in Collins St. She worked mainly with women and children, especially
at the Collingwood Free Medical Mission where large numbers attended
her weekly clinic. In 1892 she was joined by her sister Grace Clara
Stone (1860-1957) who had been among the first women to enter the
Melbourne Medical School in 1887, graduating in 1891. She was also
assisted by her cousin Dr Emily Mary Page Stone (1865-1910).
Stone's major achievement was the foundation of the Queen Victoria
Memorial Hospital. In September 1896 her husband, David Egryn Jones
MD, a minister at the Welsh Church in Latrobe St, secured the use
of the church hall as an outpatients dispensary on three mornings
a week. Most of the women doctors in Melbourne agreed to join Stone
in starting a hospital officered only by women which gave poor women
the opportunity to be treated by their own sex, free from the ordeal
of examination in front of male medical students. It was an immediate
success and a committee, headed by suffrage leader Annette Bear-Crawford
(q.v.), was appointed to run the hospital and secure permanent premises
with inpatient facilities. A shilling fund was supported by women
throughout Victoria and in July 1899 the hospital was officially
opened. Stone and Crawford worked hard to establish the hospital
but unfortunately, just before it opened, Crawford died suddenly
and Stone began the sick leave that ended in her death from tuberculosis
on 29 December 1902.
Dr Stone's achievement's are impressive for such a short career.
By her low-key and quiet manner, along with her impressive qualifications
and overseas experience, she helped pave the way for medical women
in Melbourne. In 1895 she founded the Victorian Medical Women's
Society. She was involved in suffrage work, particularly in the
Victorian Women's Franchise League and the United Council for Women's
Suffrage; was elected to the committees of the Australian Health
Society and the Melbourne Benevolent Asylum; and was associated
with a number of social reform organisations including the Woman's
Christian Temperance Union and the Young Women's Christian Association.
She was one of the few medical pioneers to marry and her daughter,
Bronwen, also became a doctor. Constance Stone succeeded in her
aim of doing 'useful work in the world'.
Monika Wells
M. Hutton Neve This Mad Folly!': The History of Australia's Pioneer
Women Doctors 1980.
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