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After training to be a doctor at the London School of Medicine for
Women, Flora Murray (1869 1923) became an active member of the
Women's Social and Political Union. At the outbreak of the First
World War, she and her fellow suffragists laid down their banners
and sought to aid the Allied war effort. Working within the newly
formed Women's Hospital Corps, Murray and her colleague Louisa
Garrett Anderson (1873 1943) overcame initial prejudice and
established two military hospitals in France in the period 1914 15.
Their success prompted an invitation from the War Office to open
the Endell Street Military Hospital in London, staffed entirely by
women. First published in 1920, Murray's account, illustrated with
numerous photographs, records important steps in furthering the
acceptance of women in the medical profession. For female doctors,
surgeons and nurses, the war provided not only the 'occasion for
service' but also 'great professional opportunities'."
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