Table 1: Statistics Concerning Appalachian Midwives

Dublin Core

Title

Table 1: Statistics Concerning Appalachian Midwives

Subject

Grannies Mothers, and Babies: An Examination of Traditional Southern Appalachian Midwifery

Description

A table concerning data retrieved for a study done on Appalachian midwives in the 20th century

Creator

Shaunna Scott
University of California (Berkley)

Source

Scott, Shaunna. “Grannies, Mothers and Babies: An Examination of Traditional Southern Appalachian Midwifery.” Central Issues in Anthropology, vol. 4, no. 2, 1982, pp. 17–30., doi:10.1525/cia.1982.4.2.17.

Publisher

Central Issues in Anthropology

Date

Issue published in 1982

Type

Table of data

Coverage

Data concerning 84 midwives,
61 of whom practiced in eastern Kentucky
(specifically in Floyd, Knott, Leslie, McCreary, Owsley and Pike counties)
The remainder worked in West Virginia, Tennessee, North Carolina and northern Georgia. These
women practiced primarily during the 1920s and 1930s, though a few continued midwifery activities into the 1940s and 1950s. Information was
obtained through personal and telephone interviews conducted by the
U.S. Department of Labor, ChildrenT
s Bureau, [1918; 1923],
Mary Breckinridge, [1923], Patti Rose, [1971], Karen Cox,
[1973], Luther Frazier, [1974], Linda Green, [1978] and this author, Shaunna Scott. When, because of death or illness, the midwife was unavailable for interview, information was obtained
from daughters, neighbors or clients. Information concerning 8 of this
sample was gathered from such sources.

Text Item Type Metadata

Text

An Examination of Traditional Southern Appalachian Midwifery

Original Format

Table 1. Statistics Concerning Appalachian Midwives

Files

Midwifery Chart.png

Citation

Shaunna Scott University of California (Berkley), “Table 1: Statistics Concerning Appalachian Midwives,” Hunter Library Omeka Collections, accessed November 15, 2024, http://digitalhumanities.wcu.edu/omeka/items/show/512.