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Sarah Stone, A Complete Practice of Midwifery
Sarah Stone learned midwifery in Bristol from her mother, also a midwife. Sarah's husband was probably an apothecary. She believed that midwives should learn as much as possible about anatomy and other medical knowledge. Working in London, she taught her daughter who carried on in her mother's footsteps. Quote from page XIII

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Questions to ask these pages:

1. What does Stone tell us about her patients?

2. How did Stone feel about birth instruments?


Questions to ask the book:

1. Why did Stone object to man-midwives?
Find out in
the archive

2. According to Stone, what advantages did she have over the man-midwives to whom she objected?
Find out in
the archive



Reading Help

  title page Page XIII Page XIV  

 

A

Complete Practice

OF

MIDWIFERY.

Consisting of


Upwards of FORTY CASES or
OBSERVATIONS in that valuable ART, selected from many Others, in the course of a very EXTENSIVE PRACTICE.

And Interspersed

With many necessary CAUTIONS and useful INSTRUCTIONS, proper to be observed in the most Dangerous and Critical Exigencies, as well when the Delivery is difficult in its own Nature, as when it becomes so by the Rashness or Ignorance of Unexperienc'd Pretenders.


Recommended to

ALL FEMALE PRACTITIONERS in an art so important to the LIVES and WELL-BEING of the SEX.


By SARAH STONE,
Of PICADILLY.


LONDON:

Printed for T. COOPER, at the Globe in Pater-Noster Row. MDCXXXVII.

 





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