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Seattle Pioneer Midwife: Alice Ada Wood Ellis Midwife Nurse & Mother to All

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"This is the captivating story of my great-grandmother Alice Ada Wood Ellis - who was a single mother with two small children - Myrtle who was 2 ½ years old and Marie who was a 6 month-old baby. She traveled to Seattle in 1900 on a locomotive steam train to join the Alaska-Yukon-Klondike Gold Rush Stampede. She built a home in Green Lake. Soon after she placed two beds in her front parlor in her home and helped women with birthing. She fufilled her calling as a pioneer midwife-nurse. This epic saga includes life in 1895 nursing schools, train robbers, birthing in the home, Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition, women's suffrage, bubonic plague and unclaimed children. Stories from the 1918 Great Pandemic Flu and the Great Depression conclude this remarkable journey. This is Alice's story."

286 pages, Paperback

First published December 30, 2013

180 people are currently reading
61 people want to read

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5 stars
63 (33%)
4 stars
43 (23%)
3 stars
54 (29%)
2 stars
21 (11%)
1 star
5 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for Gail.
1,875 reviews18 followers
March 17, 2021
Tedious

This book is an interesting fairly short but tedious book to read. It wasn't what I expected. I don't recommend it.
Profile Image for Josephine Ensign.
Author 4 books50 followers
July 12, 2017
A very disappointing and poorly written book that would have benefited from professional copyediting if nothing else. The topic was of interest to me.
Profile Image for Kathi Toussaint.
15 reviews1 follower
March 15, 2023
Spectacular read

This is a wonderful read for any nurse who works on a birthing center and of course for any midwife.
My great grandmother was also a lay mid wife. She lived in very northern Vermont. She herself had 11 children! Some of her stories are similar. I won't say more as I don't want to spoil it for the reader.
Profile Image for Madison Buxton.
43 reviews
January 16, 2023
Interesting account of a family history that highlighted the beginning of and changes in Midwifery and Seattle's history during the early 1900s. A little difficult to read, didn't flow well sometimes but the content and pictures were fascinating.
28 reviews
March 2, 2021
What an enjoyable book to read. I did not realize that this book would give such an interesting history of Seattle, Washington. Sorry to have finished reading this.... very good book.
229 reviews1 follower
April 13, 2021
Great book

I really enjoyed this historical timeline and personal story of this remarkable young woman during her amazing life and times in early Washington State.
141 reviews
November 2, 2021
Very Good
Midwife goes with her family to Seattle... 1908 World's Fair
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
3 reviews
September 23, 2021
Wonderfully told.

I read this in one setting and will most likely read it again. Thanks so much to the author for sharing with us.

Profile Image for Rose Marie Peterson.
81 reviews
July 3, 2018
This book was interesting about a family moving from the midwest to the Seattle area during the early 1900's. Personal accounts are told and related to a great-granddaughter as she follows in the tradition of nursing as her Grands and Greats did. The format of the book is broken down into small chapters of personal accounts of birthing, midwifery and local stories of people and Seattle sites. There is a lot of accounting of historical midwifery/nursing methods practiced during the 1800's-1920's. The historical accounts jump around and the narrative goes off base at times. There should have been a little more editing of this book however once I was halfway through I looked at it as a novice writer retelling her family history and how members of the family evolved as they helped support and build the Seattle communities.
Profile Image for Beth Cato.
Author 134 books709 followers
January 3, 2016
As a family history, this is a priceless artifact; as a work for public consumption, it sadly feels like a self-published work in need of deep editing to make it more interesting, less passive, and more focused on the fascinating women at the center of the story. I really hoped for more data on turn-of-the-20th-century Seattle from the intimate perspective of a midwife, but other than some fantastic photographs, that detail wasn't there. There were only a few personal midwife stories in the middle of the book. My words may be critical, but I still think it's fabulous that the author created this for the sake of her own family. I certainly wish my own kin had passed down a book of this nature!
Profile Image for Dina.
258 reviews4 followers
May 27, 2014
I appreciate the fact that the Seattle public library got this book. 3+ It reads like a blend of thesis/story/history and is fascinating though a bit choppy. It tells the story of a young woman, recently divorced (very undignified at the time so she told people in Seattle when she had moved there from the Midwest that she was a widow), who finds a career in Seattle in the early 1900s. She had a year of midwifery school, so her parlor became a birthing center, often to prostitutes. I learned a great deal about Seattle at that times, the role of women, and the development of the medical field. It is a good addition to local Seattle history.
161 reviews1 follower
September 1, 2024
I enjoyed learning more about Seattle at the turn of the century. The 1918 flu affected some of my own ancestors; my great-great-grandmother on my mother's dad's side of the family and several of her family members died during that time. It was interesting reading about nursing school during this time as well as midwifery care. I had midwifery care with seven of my eight babies and am now myself a midwife.
The formatting drove me a little crazy.
4 reviews
September 1, 2014
I really enjoyed the interweaving of the known history of Alice Ellis, with fiction and also historical events and famous people that were in the same area, etc. Knowing that this was a labor (no pun intended) of love for the author, sharing her Grandmother's history, made this book even more enjoyable.
16 reviews
April 26, 2015
Had potential but fell short.

I love the idea of this book. Unfortunately, it reads like a poorly written research paper. The author skips all over the place, and the frequent illustrations are a distraction. With better organization it would probably make for a good read, but as it is I couldn't get through it.
23 reviews
June 8, 2016
This was a very good book. I loved the stories and the background on what was going on at the time. I was very disappointed to learn that most of it was made up. I was expecting the book to be based off a diary or newspaper articles. The writer took a lot of creative liberties, guessing on what her great-grandmother MIGHT have been going through or feeling at the time.
Profile Image for Anita Elder.
Author 2 books5 followers
December 29, 2016
I read this book because of two interest of mine...history of the Green Lake neighborhood in Seattle (my neighborhood) and my love of midwife stories. The midwife's grand-daughter is the author. The stories are good, but the writing isn't that great. I still found it interesting, especially the glimpses of life in the early 20th century here in Seattle.
Profile Image for Jeanne.
1,523 reviews
June 8, 2014
An interesting book that is part biography and part local history. The writing needs a little polishing, but I'd recommend this book to anyone interested in the early pioneer days in Washington State. I enjoyed the many historical photographs included in the book.
Profile Image for Cynthia.
233 reviews1 follower
September 29, 2015
Very interesting story of this family and of the history of the times -- early 1900's. Not especially well written but still well researched and interesting. I enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Lindah.
110 reviews
November 30, 2015
Nice accounts of Seattle history that aren't often told. Love the family history.
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

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