May 02, 2019

Finding Kate: The Unlikely Story of 20th Century Healthcare Advocate Kate Macy Ladd

Meryl Carmel’s Finding Kate gives a voice to the forgotten women of the Gilded Age.

As an heiress to the Standard Oil company, Kate Macy Ladd could have spent all of her life in leisure, but she used her money and influence to champion affordable medical treatment and the education of men and women in health professions. She established convalescent homes for medical patients who had trouble affording the care they needed and founded the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation, which gives grants to students entering the medical field.

The author, a teacher who later pursued a graduate degree in history, discovered in the process of conducting research for this book, that Kate Macy Ladd had employed a nurse to oversee the free women’s convalescent home she established in Peapack, N.J. in 1908. The nurse, H. Estelle Dudley, turned out to be the great-great aunt of Carmel’s Beloit roommate, Millicent Dudley Lake’74.


Also In This Issue

  • Rick Brooks’69 is co-founder of Little Free Libraries, the book sharing movement with more than 80,000 registered libraries in more than 90 countries. 

    Beloit: That Unique Place Right Across the Border

    more
  • Joel Simon, executive director of the Committee to protect Journalists, served as Beloit’s 2019 Weissberg Chair, a residency program focused on human rights and social justice.

    In Defense of Press Freedom

    more
  • 1884 Beloit College Commencement Program. The invitations and programs reproduced in this story are part of a larger collection in Beloit College Archives.

    Voices and Ephemera from Commencements Past

    more

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