Martha G. Thorwick

American physician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Martha G. Thorwick

Martha G. Thorwick (1863 — November 16, 1921) was a Norwegian-born American clubwoman and medical doctor based in San Francisco, California, whose personal life was the subject of scandal and headlines.

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Martha G. Thorwick, from a 1911 publication.

Early life

Martha Gurine Thorwick was born in Tingvoll Municipality in Nordmøre, Norway, and immigrated to Chicago as a girl. She attended Jenner Medical College and the University of Illinois and earned her medical degree in 1901.[1][2]

Career

Thorwick had a medical practice in San Francisco from 1901. In 1920 she was listed as affiliated with the Mendocino State Hospital; in 1921, she resigned from a post as physician at the California School for Girls in Ventura; her resignation precipitated a school-wide violent protest.[3]

Thorwick was also active in Scandinavian women's organizations in San Francisco.[4] She founded NORA (a Norwegian women's hospital charity)[5] and was its president for several years.[6] She also helped to organize the Daughters of Norway Lodge Anna Kolbjornsen No. 4, and served as secretary of the Danish Sisterhood.[1]

Personal life

In 1915, Martha G. Thorwick married her patient, Niso Secondo di Giannini, an Italian count and World War I veteran she first met in Chicago.[7][8] However, the count soon accused Thorwick of trickery, medical malpractice, and abuse, and sued for annulment on the basis of "fraud and duress".[9][10] They divorced; in 1917 he announced that he was returning to France, because "I prefer the front line trenches to matrimony."[11] He nonetheless continued to harass Dr. Thorwick, narrowly avoiding a jail sentence for his activities.[12]

Martha Gurine Thorwick di Giannini died in 1921, aged 58 years,[13] from stomach cancer,[14] in San Francisco.[15]

References

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