Lillie Rosa Minoka Hill Explained

Lillie Rosa Minoka-Hill
Birth Date:30 August 1875
Birth Place:New Jersey
Death Place:Fond du Lac, Wisconsin
Spouse:Charles Hill, m. 1905, d. 1916
Occupation:Physician
Father:Joshua Gibbons Allen, physician and obstetrician
Mother:Mohawk woman
Education:Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania (now part of Drexel University) (1899)

Lillie Rosa Minoka-Hill (August 30, 1875 – March 18, 1952) was an American physician. Although referred to as a Native American woman, Minoka was not a citizen of any Native American tribe. She was told her mother was a Mohawk. Her father was of Quaker descent. Regardless of the uncertainty of her family life, she made the most of education provided by her father. Minoka was educated at a Quaker boarding school in Philadelphia. She attended medical school there, and rare for women at the time, obtained her degree in 1899.

For decades, Minoka-Hill operated a clinic at her house, on the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin reservation. Her husband died in 1916, leaving her the family provider, care giver for her children, and farm operator.

Minoka-Hill gained her state medical license in Wisconsin in 1934 and, in her later years, was honored for her contributions to rural medical care. In 1947, she was adopted as an honorary member by the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin, the only person so honored in the 20th century. They gave her the name Yo-da-gent, meaning "she who carries aid" or "she who serves".

Early life and education

Lillie Minnetoga, that she later changed to Minoka,[1] was born August 30, 1875,[2] in New Jersey. Minoka's mother, who was under the care of Dr. Joshua Allen, died during childbirth. The name of her mother, said to be a Mohawk woman, is unknown.[3] Dr. Allen, a bachelor, was her father, but she did not know that as a child. Joshua Gibbons Allen (1832-1903) was a Quaker physician, obstetrician, and gynecological expert who graduated from the University of Pennsylvania Medical School in 1856. For 23 years, he was the physician-in-chief at the Lying-in-Charity in Philadelphia.[4]

Minoka, who was not a citizen of any Native American tribe,[5] lived with her maternal Mohawk grandmother of an unknown name in Atlantic City, New Jersey and occasionally she was visited by Dr. Allen from Philadelphia.

Minoka was removed from her home at five. Allen gave her the name Rosa and took her to a Quaker girl's boarding school, Grahame Institute. It was operated by Israel and Jane Grahame, who were caring. Allen, who let people believe that he was her benefactor, brought her books of Native Americans and taught her about the Mohawk people, and what he knew about their history and lifestyle.[6] She learned that Quakers valued caring and kindness. Minoka studied French in Quebec (Canada) for one year when she was thirteen. After she returned to Philadelphia, Minoka converted to Catholicism. Her father respected her decision.

In 1895, when Minoka was 18, Allen let her know that he was her father and that she was not misbegotten. He would not tell her about her mother, though.

Medical school and early career

Minoka decided to become a nurse after graduating from high school, but her father said that she should be a physician because of the education she had received and he paid for her education. Minoka attended the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania (now part of Drexel University). She earned her degree in 1899.[7] Minoka was the second Native American woman in the United States to obtain a medical degree,[8] [9] after Susan La Flesche Picotte (Omaha).

After she and her friend Frances Tyson graduated, they also setup a private practice for walk-in patients. Minoka provided medical care for Native American students at the Lincoln Institute boarding school. Minoka made friends with the students there, like Anna Hill, an Oneida student at Lincoln Institute from Wisconsin. Anna introduced Minoka to her brother Charles Abram Hill. She secured her internship at the public Woman's Hospital in 1900. At the Women's Clinic, she treated poor women.

Her father died in September 1903, but not before declaring that Minoka was his daughter in a newspaper notice. She was left his estate valued at about $50,000 in the form of a trust fund.[10] Feeling insecure, she shared the information about her father, her mother, and her birth with Charles Hill, which made them closer.

Marriage and family

In June 1905, Minoka married Charles Hill in Philadelphia, becoming Lillie Rosa Minoka-Hill. They lived in Oneida, Wisconsin on his farm alotment on the reservation. Charles established a farm and built a two-story house. He wanted a farmer's wife, though she wanted to stay active in her medical practice.

Minoka-Hill learned traditional Oneida medical practices from Charles' grandmother, like the curative powers of plants, wildflowers, and roots. She integrated that information with the medical training that she received and her clinical experiences. Without a Wisconsin medical license, Minoka-Hill worked without pay for family and friends, which prevented legal issues.

Minoka-Hill and Charles had six children, Rosa Melissa, Charles Allen, Norbert, Alfred Grahame, and twins, Jane Frances and Josephine.

In 1916, Charles died on Easter Sunday of a appendicitis. Minoka-Hill was left to raise six children, five of whom were less than six years old, and take care of the farm and its animals on her own. During the winter of 1917–1918, her children contracted influenza during the international epidemic, but all survived. She took care of her neighbors and friends and relied upon their payments in food for her family.

Medical practice

The reservation's physician, Dr. Josiah Powless served during World War I and Minoka-Hill was the lone remaining physician in 1916 or 1917. Powless died just before the end of the war. After that, Minoka-Hill's services were even more critical; she tended to nearly all the tribe's local medical needs. She often spent entire nights at bedsides.

In 1929, her trust fund, established by her father Joshua Allen, collapsed in the Stock Market Crash that began the Great Depression.

In 1934, Minoka-Hill gained her Wisconsin medical license. Being licensed allowed her to admit patients to the hospital, charge fees, and prescribe medicine. Minoka-Hill received her Wisconsin license and attained a job as a local health officer. With an office in town she saw white and Native American patients.

A heart attack in 1946 forced Minoka-Hill into semi-retirement, though she continued her clinic in her home, until her death in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin on March 18, 1952, of a heart attack.[11]

Legacy and honors

The historical figure, Charlie Hill, an Oneida comedian was the grandson of Dr. Lillie Rosa Minoka-Hill. A granddaughter, now known as Roberta Hill Whiteman became a poet and professor of English and American Indian Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.[17] [18]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Anderson, Greta . More than petticoats. Remarkable Wisconsin women . 2004 . TwoDot . 978-0-7627-2529-8 . Guilford, Connecticut.
  2. Book: Ewen, Alexander . Encyclopedia of the American Indian in the twentieth century . Wollock . Jeffrey . 2015 . Albuquerque : University of New Mexico Press . 978-0-8263-5595-9 . 285.
  3. Web site: Little Rosa Minoka Hill. Changing the Face of Medicine. U.S. National Library of Medicine . June 3, 2015 . May 12, 2024.
  4. Book: Chamberlain, Joshua Lawrence . University of Pennsylvania; its history, influence, equipment and characteristics; with biographical sketches . Cheyney . Edward Potts . Oberholtzer . Ellis Paxson . 1902 . R. Herndon . Boston . 79–80.
  5. Web site: Frank . Vaisvilas . When it comes to blood quantum, celebrated Oneida doctor wouldn't actually be Oneida. Inside the blood quantum dilemma facing First Nations. . Green Bay Press Gazette. November 2, 2022. May 12, 2024.
  6. Book: Stille, Darlene R. . Extraordinary Women Of Medicine (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) (Extraordinary People) . 1997-11-01 . Turtleback . 978-0-613-13504-7 . 187.
  7. Web site: Drexel University College of Medicine. Our Diverse History.
  8. Book: Buchanan, Paul D. . Race Relations in the United States: A Chronology, 1896-2005 . 2015-09-16 . McFarland . 978-1-4766-1842-5 . 76 . en.
  9. News: Padilla . Lauren . November 8, 2018 . Five women who changed the field of medicine . 2024-05-16 . The John Hopkins News-Letter . en-US.
  10. News: 1903-10-08 . Wills Probated . 2024-05-14 . The Philadelphia Inquirer . 4.
  11. Book: Women in world history : a biographical encyclopedia . 2001 . Yorkin Publications . Commire . Anne. Klezmer . Deborah . 0-7876-4069-7 . Waterford, Connecticut . 154–155 . en.
  12. Book: Buchanan, Paul D. . Race Relations in the United States: A Chronology, 1896-2005 . 2015-09-16 . McFarland . 978-1-4766-1842-5 . 76 . en.
  13. Medrud . Mariagnes Aya . November 1992 . Courage Grows With Occasion . Friends Journal . 14.
  14. News: 1988-11-23 . Scholarships . 2024-05-16 . Char-Koosta News . A6.
  15. Web site: Dr. Rosa Minoka-Hill School (K-12): About Us . 2024-05-16 . minokahill.gbaps.org . en-US.
  16. News: Kloepping . Sarah . Native American play coming to Two Rivers . 2024-05-16 . en-US.
  17. Web site: 2023-11-30 . Native American Heritage Month: Dr. Susan La Flesche Picotte and Dr. Lillie Rosa Minoka-Hill: Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Blog . 2024-05-16 . College of Medicine . en.
  18. Web site: Academy of American Poets: Roberta Hill Whiteman . 2024-05-16 . Poets.org . en.