Annie Louise Wilkerson
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Annie Louise Wilkerson (January 18, 1914-September 15, 2005) was an American obstetrician and gynecologist. Over the course of her career, Wilkerson is estimated to have delivered 8,000 babies in Raleigh, North Carolina.


Early life and education

Wilkerson, born in 1914 in Apex, North Carolina, spent many of her early years with her father, Dr. Charles Wilkerson, as he visited patients on his rounds via horse and buggy. Annie expressed interested in becoming a doctor at age two, at which point her father began teaching her basic medical knowledge. Her family moved to Raleigh in 1920. She was one of five siblings, and her two brothers also went on to become doctors. Despite her early training in medicine, Wilkerson's family discouraged her from going into the medical field, in part due to fears that she would never marry or have her own life if she became a doctor.


Medical career

In 1936, Wilkerson graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with her bachelor's degree in medicine. Due to the extreme difficulty of a woman entering into medical school in North Carolina, Wilkerson traveled to Virginia for school. In her class of 72 students at Medical College of Virginia, she was one of four women. As a freshman in medical school, Wilkerson attended a delivery with her father, and delivered her first baby at age 20. The child was named Annie Louise Wilkerson Horton, after her. Wilkerson had her internship at Rex Hospital in Raleigh, the first woman to do so. She initially faced resistance for the idea, and worked for free and lived in the hospital's maternity ward in exchange for the internship. Wilkerson began officially practicing medicine in 1940, after becoming the first woman to complete an internship and residency at
Rex Hospital UNC Rex Hospital is a general hospital located in Raleigh, North Carolina. It is the capital city's oldest hospital, founded by a bequest from John T. Rex (1771-1839), a local tanner. Originally located on what is now Dorothea Dix campus, and ...
in Raleigh. Wilkerson initially attended home births, but later decided to work solely at a hospital, where she felt she was better prepared to help patients. She was heavily involved with efforts fighting polio in the city in the 1940s. She attempted to enlist with the U.S. army to provide medical care to soldiers, but was denied on the premise that she was needed in Raleigh. In 1961, Wilkerson became chief of staff at Memorial Hospital of Wake County, the first integrated hospital in the state. Wilkerson was one of only a few Raleigh doctors who served workers at Raleigh's brothel. She retired in 1993, alongside her two brothers.


Publications

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Recognition and awards

In 2004, Wilkerson was honored with the North Carolina Award, the state's highest civilian honor, for her contributions to science.


Personal life

In 1953, Wilkerson bought a property near
Falls Lake Falls Lake is a 12,410 acre (50 kmĀ²) reservoir located in Durham, Wake, and Granville counties in North Carolina, United States. Falls Lake extends up the Neuse River to its source at the confluence of the Eno, Little, and Flat rivers. ...
, on which she built a home and raised cows. She bought a second, adjacent parcel in the 1990s. Wilkerson never married and had no biological children.


Legacy

Wilkerson left her 150 acres of property to the city of Raleigh upon her death, on the requirement that the land not be developed and be kept as a park. The land became Raleigh's first nature preserve. Her house remained on the property, and was made into a museum and nature center.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Wilkerson, Annie Louise 1914 births 2005 deaths 20th-century American physicians 20th-century American women physicians American gynecologists American obstetricians Medical College of Virginia alumni People from Apex, North Carolina People from Raleigh, North Carolina Physicians from North Carolina University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill alumni Women gynaecologists Women obstetricians