Edinburgh to name street after medical pioneer Elsie Inglis

AN Edinburgh road, crescent or avenue is set to be named after medical pioneer Elsie Inglis to mark the centenary of her death next year.

Councillors will be asked next week to consider the move to honour Doctor Elsie Inglis (1864 – 1917).

Widely regarded as a heroine of the First World War and an advocate for women’s rights, Elsie Inglis was instrumental in setting up the Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Foreign Service Committee, an organisation funded by the women’s suffrage movement for the Allied war effort.

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Councillor Richard Lewis, Edinburgh’s Culture Convener, said: “Elsie Inglis established better medical practices and conditions for women in hospitals and was a central figure in the suffrage movement. As we edge towards the centenary of her death, a street named in her honour would provide a new tribute to this pioneering figure.”

The move has been welcomed by campaigner and historian Alan Cumming, who said it was important to remind residents of Elsie Inglis’ Edinburgh roots.

He said: “I think it would be wonderful if the Council recognised Elsie Inglis in this way. She was a remarkable lady and influential in medicine even to this day. She helped the city’s poor and thousands of people turned out to her funeral at St Giles Cathedral almost 100 years ago. It is important to continue recognising the role that Elsie Inglis played in Edinburgh.”

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There are five memorials to Elsie Inglis in Edinburgh, including a bronze plaque where she founded her own medical practice and maternity hospital at 219 High Street.

Further plaques commemorating her life and achievements can be found at 8 Walker Street at the site of her pre-war hospice; next to the University of Edinburgh at Old Surgeon’s Square; and in Holyrood Park where the Elsie Inglis Hospital stood until 1988.

A stone tablet sculpted by Pilkington Jackson in her memory is on display in St Giles Cathedral where her funeral service was held in November 1917.