Pueblo, Colorado is one of the early towns along the front range of Colorado.
It began as a business fort located near the confluence of Fountain Creek and the Arkansas River. It was where Zebulon Pike built a stockade when he made his attempt to climb the peak that was named after him. Needless to say, he didn't make it. He even went so far as to say it could never be climbed. (Don't tell all those people who annually run the marathon from the base to the top and back again). Before 1900 Pueblo was one of the larger communities in the state.
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| 1890 map of Pueblo Colorado from World Maps online |
It originally was separate towns which eventually became one. South Pueblo was the
town that was created for the workers who manufactured steel for the rails
of William
Jackson Palmer‘s Denver
& Rio Grande railroad.
This in manufacturing plant became CF&I (Colorado
Fuel & Iron)
a major employer in the early days of the town and a great history
read.
| Main Office- CF&I from Wikipedia |
Pueblo also became the home of the Colorado State Insane
Asylum, later known as the Colorado State Hospital. On October 23,
1879 it opened its doors to eleven patients, nine men and two women,
from around the state.
The asylum also was an early institution to hire women doctors. One such was Mary Alice Lake. Lake was born in
1865 and was a graduate of the University
of Colorado School of Medicine and
received her state license in 1896. She was an assistant
physician at the State Asylum but also had a practiced in Cripple
Creek, Colorado in
1896.
Additional women also practiced medicine in the Pueblo area. Some who practiced before 1900 were:
Lizzie
E. Jones born in Iowa in 1854 and graduated from the State University
of Iowa in 1881. She was also one of the early female doctors to
receive a license on January 3, 1882 , # 343 and had a practiced
in Pueblo. In June of 1882 she married Reuben F. Eldridge.
Mary F. Barry was born in 1859 in Illinois and
attended Northwestern
University Women’s
Medical College where she graduated in 1887. She received her
license to practice medicine in Colorado in 1895 and had her
practice in Pueblo. During her career she was the secretary of
the Pueblo County Medical Society.
There
is also a Genevieve M. Tucker who was born in Wisconsin in 1859 who
received her Colorado license in 1893 and is listed as also
practicing in Pueblo. Dr. Tucker wrote the book "Mother, Baby, and Nursery: A Manual for Mothers" in 1896. She was also elected president of the Colorado Homeopathic Society in 1898.
And if course one cannot forget Rilla G. Hay. Dr. Hay was an 1873 graduate of the University of Iowa Medical College and received her Colorado license in 1885. She had a practice in Pueblo, She was an assistant physician at the Asylum, and later moved to Denver where she continued her education. She was also the first woman to be admitted to the Colorado Medical Society, which had been founded in 1871.
There are more stories of women doctors in Pueblo, and the rip roaring outlaws and lawmen, but that is for a latter time.
Doris Gardner-McCraw -
Author, Speaker, Historian-specializing in
Colorado and Women's History
Colorado and Women's History
Angela Raines - author: Where Love & History Meet
For a list of Angela Raines Books: Here
Angela Raines FaceBook: Click Here

