Ng'endo Mwangi (died October 30, 1989), also known as Florence Gladwell or Florence Mwangi Mwilu, was Kenya's first woman physician.[1] She set up clinics serving a very large rural population. She was the first Black African woman to attend Smith College, and the first African student at Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
Mwangi was born in Kinoo, Kiambu, Kenya, the daughter of Rahab Wambui Mwangi and Mwangi Muchiri. She attended Loreto High school, Limuru, as part of its pioneer class.[2] Mwangi studied in the United States under the Kennedy Airlifts program, and became the first black African woman to attend Smith College in Massachusetts.[1][3][4] She graduated from Smith College in 1961, after which she became the first African student at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City.[5][3]
Career
Returning to Kenya as a qualified physician, Mwangi opened her first practice, the Athi River Clinic, in an arid rural region southeast of Nairobi where she was the only doctor for over 300,000 Maasai people. In 1987 she founded the Reto Medical Center at Sultan Hamud.[3][6]
Honors
Members of the Black Students Alliance at Smith College made the case for additional facilities on campus and, in 1973, the Mwangi Cultural Center was established and named in her honor.[7] At that time the center was located at Lilly Hall but it later was moved to the Davis Center at Smith College.[5][8] She was awarded an honorary degree by Smith College in 1987.[9] In 2005, the Mwangi Center was renovated and rededicated, with a keynote address by her daughter Wangui Mwangi.[10]
Personal life
Mwangi formally changed her name from Florence Gladwell in 1967.[11] She died of breast cancer in 1989, in Nairobi.[5][12]
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