Helen Octavia Dickens (1909-2001)

December 24, 2017 
/ Contributed By: Eleanor Mahoney

THIS ENTRY IS SPONSORED BY CHARLES KASTNER

Helen Octavia Dickens

Helen Octavia Dickens

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The first African American woman to be admitted as a fellow to the American College ofย Surgeonsย (1950), Helen Octavia Dickens dedicated her career toย womenโ€™s health and well-being, with a particular focus on the lives of young women, low-income women, and women of color. A board-certified obstetrician/ gynecologist, Dickens was aย professorย at the University ofย Pennsylvaniaย School of Medicine.

Dickens was born in Dayton,ย Ohio, on February 21, 1909. Her father, Charles Dickens, had been enslaved inย Tennesseeย as a child and moved north to Ohio shortly after the end of theย Civil War. It was there he met her mother, Daisy Jane Green, who had migrated to the United States fromย Canadaย with her family. Settling in Dayton, the couple had three children. At her fatherโ€™s insistence, Helen Octavia Dickens attendedย integratedย elementary and secondary schools, deciding to pursue a career in medicine at the age of 12.

Dickens received a B.S. at the University ofย Illinoisย in 1932, followed by an M.D. from the University of Illinois School of Medicine in 1934. The only African-American woman in her graduating class, Dickens next completed a 2-year residency in obstetrics at Provident Hospital in Chicago. She then moved to Philadelphia, working with the birthing practice of Dr. Virginia Alexander, part of Asparanto Health Home, a position she would hold for seven years.

In 1942, Dickens returned to school, this time at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Medicine, earning a Master’s Degree in Medical Science with a focus on obstetrics. In 1945, she passed the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology board examinations, making her the first African American woman to hold the certification in Philadelphia.

In 1945, Dickens became Director of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Mercyย Douglass Hospital in Philadelphia, one of only a few racially integrated facilities in the city. In 1951, she joined the staff of the Womenโ€™s Hospital, serving as chief of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology from 1956 to 1964, when the hospital was taken over by the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. Dickens eventually held faculty positions at both the Medical College of Pennsylvania and the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, where she served as associate dean of minority admissions, helping to recruit and retain students of color.

Dickensโ€™ passions extended well outside the classroom and into the community. In 1967, for example, she founded a Teen Clinic at the University of Pennsylvania aimed at aiding young mothers, one of the first such centers in the country. She also promoted early cancer screenings and prevention, especially in underserved communities. Dickens served on the board of directors for numerous nonprofit organizations, including the American Cancer Society, the Children’s Aid Society, and the Devereaux Foundation.

During her career, Dickens received honorary degrees from both the Medical College of Pennsylvania and the University of Pennsylvania. She was recognized by the American Medical Women’s Association, the National Association of Medical Minority Educators, the National Coalition of 100 Black Women, the National Council of Negro Women, and the Frederick Douglass Society. Following her retirement in 1998, the University of Pennsylvania named a clinic in her honor: the Helen O. Dickens Center for Women’s Health.

Octavia Dickens married Dr. Purvis Henderson, a surgeon, in 1943. The couple had two children, Dr. Jayne Henderson Brown and Norman Henderson. Dickens passed away on December 2, 2001, at the age of 92.

About the Author

Author Profile

Eleanor Mahoney is a doctoral student of United States history at the University of Washington in Seattle, focusing on labor, the environment, memory and place in late nineteenth and twentieth-century America. She received a Bachelor of Arts in French and History from Amherst College and a Masters in Public History from Loyola University Chicago. She has previously worked for the National Park Service as Assistant National Coordinator for Heritage Areas and for a variety of heritage conservation and labor organizations in Appalachia, the Chesapeake Bay region and New Mexico.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Mahoney, E. (2017, December 24). Helen Octavia Dickens (1909-2001). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/dickens-helen-octavia-1909-2001/

Source of the Author's Information:

Linda Mallon and Anita Sama,ย Franklin’s Daughters: Profiles of Penn Womenย (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001); Juanita R. Howard, โ€œHelen Octavia Dickens,โ€ inย Notable Black American Women: Book II, edited by Jessie Carney Smith (Detroit: Gale Research, 1996); Ameenah Shakir, “Rattling the collective consciousness: Helen Dickens and Medical Activism in Philadelphia, 1935โ€“1980,” PhD Diss., University of Miami, 2010.

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