Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Josephine Letitia Denny Fairfield CBE MB CM MD (10 March 1885 – 1 February 1978) was a medical doctor, a lawyer, a war-worker, and the first ever female Chief Medical Officer for London. She received a CBE for her outstanding achievements in medicine following her contributions in World War I, despite initially having been rejected by the War ...

  2. Dr Letitia Fairfield was a female doctor, whose relentless ambition for change ensured immense improvement in the health care of previously ignored and under-represented members of society; a woman who remained focused on what she believed was right, ignoring the social barriers obstructing her.

  3. Letitia Fairfield (1885-1978) was a pioneering medical doctor, lawyer and women’s rights campaigner, with an interest in parapsychology.

  4. Letitia became the chief Medical Officer, with overall responsibility for the medical care of these women. Letitia Fairfield in 1917 (© Wellcome Collection) As the Second World War began, the War Office sought her out and she was appointed Senior Woman Medical Officer of the Armed Forces.

  5. www.innertemple.org.uk › women-in-law › pioneering-women-in-lawLetitia Fairfield | Inner Temple

    Considering her contributions to the field of public health, her place amongst the very first women called to the Bar in England, and her involvement in some of the most controversial political issues of the century, Letitia Fairfield has received surprisingly little scholarly attention.

  6. psi-encyclopedia.spr.ac.uk › sites › defaultLetitia Fairfield

    Letitia Fairfield (1885-1978) was a pioneering medical doctor, lawyer and women’s rights campaigner, with an interest in parapsychology. Life and Career. Letitia Fairfield was born in 1885 in Melbourne, Australia.[1] . Aged sixteen, following the breakdown of her parent’s marriage, she moved with her mother and two younger sisters to Edinburgh.

  7. 20 de dic. de 2019 · Dr Letitia Fairfield’s admission to Middle Temple in 1923 is usually a footnote in descriptions of her trailblazing career as a public health official and Catholic controversialist. Yet while she did not practise as a barrister, her legal formation, powers of oratory and fascination with jurisprudence were enduring legacies in a long and ...