First Nation Onion Lake Pow Wow - Anglican Cemetery St. Barnabas Mission. - Grave marker of Elizabeth Beckett Matheson. - September 2001. - Slide.

Grave marker of Dr. Elizabeth Beckett Matheson, "Doctor to the Indians and settlers" [from grave marker] at Onion Lake, Saskatchewan.

Historical note:

Elizabeth Beckett Scott was born near Campbellford, Ontario, on 6 January 1866. When she was 12, her family moved to Morris, Manitoba. Later she taught for three years, then registered at the Women's Medical College, Queen's University, Kingston in 1887. After a year of training, she went to Bombay, India, as a missionary. After contracting malaria, she moved back to Canada and married the Rev. John Richard "Grace" Matheson. The following year, the couple was posted to Onion Lake, Saskatchewan. Elizabeth returned to Toronto in 1896 to complete her medical training and receive an MD degree from the University of Trinity College, Toronto. The NWT College of Physicians and Surgeons refused to register her, so she went to Winnipeg to repeat fourth year medicine and received a second MD degree in 1904. In 1908, the three-storey hospital at Onion Lake, with four wards and an operating room, was completed. When her husband died in 1916, Elizabeth became principal of the Onion Lake school. She completed her career as Assistant Medical Supervisor of Public Schools in Winnipeg from 1918 to 1948. Elizabeth died in San Antonio, Texas, on 15 January 1958, at the age of 92. Her daughter, Ruth Matheson Buck, wrote her biography, The Doctor Rode Side-Saddle (1974, reprinted 2003 by the Canadian Plains Research Center).
Author/Creator
Hans S. Dommasch (photographer)
Open Access
Yes
Primary Source
Yes
Publication Date
2001-09
Credit
University of Saskatchewan Archives, Hans Dommasch fonds, MG172-BX66-5-4-First-Onion-Anglican-Elizabeth (Box 66); records from Our Legacy site, http://scaa.sk.ca/ourlegacy
Location
Resource Type
Images -- Photographs
Format
Image
Language
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