• About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
Epaper
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER
No Result
View All Result
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
No Result
View All Result
Home Latest News

Google Doodle honours India’s first US-trained female doctor

Agencies by Agencies
March 31, 2018
in Latest News
A A
0
Google Doodle honours India’s first US-trained female doctor
FacebookTwitterWhatsapp

Mumabi: Google on Saturday created a special Doodle to mark the 153rd birth anniversary of Thane-born Anandi Gopal Joshi, regarded as India’s first US-trained female medico.

The Goodle, designed by Kashmira Sarode of Bengaluru, depicts a young sari-clad Anandi, with a heavy Maharashtrian nose-ring and a prominent bindi.

More News

Fog disrupts Delhi airport ops; 118 flights cancelled, 16 diverted

Bangladesh’s former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia dies

EOW Kashmir files chargesheet against Bihar man for duping 1,300 youth on job pretext

Load More

She is seen in the Doodle holding aloft her medical degree, sporting a stethoscope. The pallu (veil) of her sari is aflutter in the breeze as if in cheerful celebrations of her medical achievement, all at the age of 19.

In the background is the stark ground-plus-two-storied building of her alma-mater in Pennsylvania and her purported humble abode in coastal Maharashtra with typical cottages and a swaying coconut tree.

Originally named ‘Yamuna’, she was born on March 31, 1865 in Kalyan town in today’s Thane district, around 50 kms north of Mumbai. She was married off aged nine to a widower, Gopalrao Joshi, who worked as a postal clerk.

Joshi’s work later took the couple to Alibag in Raigad and then to Calcutta, now Kolkata.

At 14, Anandi gave birth to a son, but the child survived only 10 days as the necessary health care facilities were not available then.

This sparked the flame in Anandi to take up medical studies to which her husband Joshi not only agreed, but also encouraged as he was always a strong proponent of women’s education, something rare in that era.

In 1880, he wrote to an American missionery, Royal Wilder, about Anandi’s desire to pursue medicine in the US and also about prospects for himself.

Wilder published the letter in a journal after which a woman named Theodicia Carpenter of New Jersey read it and offered Anandi accommodation in the US.

However, back home in Calutta, Anandi’s health started deteriorating and Carpenter sent medicines from the US. Unfortunately, the medicines failed to heal her completely.

Finally, in 1883, Joshi decided to send his young wife alone to the US for her medical studies despite her poor health condition, and urged her to inspire other women to higher studies by setting an example.

Accordingly, she was advised to apply to the Women’s Medical College of Pennsylvania (now known as Drexel University College of Medicine), the world’s only second medical school exclusively for women launched in 1850.

However, on learning of her academic plans, the staunch Hindu conservative society of that time took strong objections. But far from getting discouraged, she met the challenge head on by addressing the community at Serampore College, India’s second oldest college.

The 17-year old Anandi forcefully defended her plans to travel to the US for a medical degree, how she and her husband had been subject to discrimination because of her moves, why the country needed Hindu female doctors and her future dream of opening a medical college for women in India itself.

Her speech was publicised widely in the media, donations poured in and she finally embarked on a ship from Kolkata to New York to reach her host, Carpenter in June 1883.

Barley 18, she secured admission to the WMCP and was enrolled by Rachel Bodley, the Dean of the august institution.

Anandi encountered fresh travails due to the harsh cold weather there, the eating habits and other problems culminating in tuberculosis, then considered a deadly disease and a huge social stigma.

However, she managed to successfully complete her medical course and was honoured with an MD degree on March 11, 1886 for her thesis “Obstetrics Among The Aryan Hindus.”

Her graduation was acknowledged by none other than the Empress of India, Queen Victoria who sent her a congratulation message.

It was time to head home and hardly 20, Anandi returned in late 1886, to a rousing reception in India, and the then state of Kolhapur appointed her as Physician-in-Charge of the female ward in the city’s Albert Edward Hospital.

However, the gnawing TB finally claimed her life on February 26, 1887. She passed away five weeks before her 22nd birthday.

Her death came as a shock and was mourned all over India. Her ashes were sent to her hostess Carpenter to be kept in her family cemetery in Poughkeepsie, New York.

The next year, US feminist author Caroline Wells Healey Dall penned Joshi’s biography. India’s Doordarshan created a Hindi serial on her life called “Anandi Gopal”, while Marathi writer Shrikrishna J. Joshi wrote a story on her life which was later adapted into a theatre production by R. G. Joglekar.

Another Marathi author Anjalai Kirtani came out with a book, “Dr. Anandibai Joshi – Kaal Ani Kartutva”, that included some extremely rare photographers of the legendary medico.

In her honour, the Institute for Research & Documentation in Social Sciences, Lucknow instituted the annual “Anandibai Joshi Award” and the Maharashtra government offers a fellowship named after her.

Though Anandi could not fulfill her dream of setting up a women’s medical college in India due to her untimely death, she inspired millions of other women in the country who took to the medical profession in a big way in the past one and half century.

IANS

Previous Post

J&K’s Mughal Road opens for traffic

Next Post

SPO shot dead by militants in Pulwama

Agencies

Agencies

Related Posts

Fog disrupts Delhi airport ops; 118 flights cancelled, 16 diverted

UK air traffic control outage to cause chaos for days, minister dismisses ‘cybersecurity incident’
by Press Trust of india
December 30, 2025

New Delhi:  At least 118 flights were cancelled, 16 flights diverted and 130 services delayed at the Delhi airport on...

Read moreDetails

Bangladesh’s former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia dies

Bangladesh apex court upholds ex-PM Zia’s bail in arson case
by Press Trust of india
December 30, 2025

Dhaka: Bangladesh first woman prime minister Khaleda Zia, who played a major role in restoring democracy after a period of...

Read moreDetails

EOW Kashmir files chargesheet against Bihar man for duping 1,300 youth on job pretext

Police produces chargesheet in Bemina terrorist attack case
by KI News
December 30, 2025

Srinagar: The Economic Offences Wing (EOW) of Crime Branch Kashmir has filed a chargesheet against Director of True Dreams Project...

Read moreDetails

VPN services suspended in Shopian, Kulgam

All VPNs suspended in Rajouri till elections
by KI News
December 30, 2025

Srinagar: Authorities in Jammu and Kashmir's Shopian and Kulgam districts on Monday suspended the use of Virtual Private Network (VPN)...

Read moreDetails

Drone recovered in Poonch

Pak Army claims it shot down Indian drone
by KI News
December 30, 2025

Mendhar: Police on Monday seized an unidentified drone found abandoned in a field in a forward village in Poonch district,...

Read moreDetails

Delhi airport sees 128 flight cancellations, 8 diversions due to fog

UK air traffic control outage to cause chaos for days, minister dismisses ‘cybersecurity incident’
by Press Trust of india
December 29, 2025

New Delhi:  At least 128 flights were cancelled, eight got diverted, and nearly 200 services were delayed at the Delhi...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
SPO shot dead by militants in Pulwama

SPO shot dead by militants in Pulwama

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
E-Mailus: kashmirimages123@gmail.com

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.

No Result
View All Result
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.