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Books : Releases : Spring 2011

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The Notorious Dr Flippin (cloth)
Click below for larger images.
The Notorious Dr Flippin (cloth)

Retail Price $34.95
Sale Price $27.96
History
228 pages | 6 x 9 | cloth
10 b/w photographs
Plains Histories
Published February 2011
978-0-89672-675-8

A black physician under fire in the heartland

The Notorious Dr. Flippin (cloth)

Abortion and Consequence in the Early Twentieth Century

Jamie Q. Tallman, with foreword by Harriet A. Washington

In 1910 a central Nebraska newspaper, the Aurora Sun, printed an editorial condemning a physician it dubbed “the notorious Dr. Flippin.” Dr. Charles Flippin’s reputation came under siege throughout the state as another newspaper editor alleged that the African American physician had committed “that most despicable of all crimes”—illegal abortion.

For thirty years rural Kansans and Nebraskans had hailed Flippin as a godsend because of his skill as a physician and his willingness to help anyone regardless of race or social class. Despite performing abortions even for young white women, Flippin managed to avoid conviction in several trials until finally pleading guilty in 1924. Tallman details the doctor’s extraordinary life and analyzes the forces behind the prosecution of the aging physician. The first book to focus exclusively on attitudes towards abortion in early twentieth-century rural communities, The Notorious Dr. Flippin supplies long overlooked context for current debate and enriches studies of African American, western, women’s, and medical history.

The Notorious Dr. Flippin masterfully reveals a personal saga in which racism, sexism, vitriolic politics, pride, and a senile stubbornness all conspired, while also warning us that the story of Dr. Flippin runs parallel to the treatment of African American doctors on the larger national stage. —Harriet A. Washington, from the foreword

Jamie Q. Tallman, who specializes in local and regional history, came upon the story of Dr. Charles Flippin while researching Flippin’s son, George, Nebraska’s first African American star football player. He lives in Lincoln, Nebraska. In addition to her extensive teaching and academic publications, Harriet A. Washington has written more than two hundred articles on medicine and science for popular periodicals. She lives in Albany, New York.

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