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Among the earliest women in the UK to pursue a career in surgery, at that time an almost entirely male-dominated profession, she was also the co-founder of the South London Hospital for Women and Children.
Born in Petworth, Sussex (brother of Frances Baker (artist), Eleanor (surgeon) and Margaret (suffragette) and cousin of Francis McDougall Charlewood Turner).
Her father, John Neville Colley Davies-Colley, was a surgeon at Guy's Hospital; her maternal grandfather, Thomas Turner, was also treasurer of that hospital.
She studied at Baker Street High School for Girls and Queen's College, London.
After leaving school, she at first worked with poor children in London's East End.
Studied medicine at the London School of Medicine for Women (1902–07), achieving the MB BS degree in 1907.
Was awarded the MD degree by the University of London in 1910.
In 1911, she became the first female fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons.
On graduating in 1907, she became a house surgeon under Maud Chadburn (with whom she was to live and work for twenty-five years) at the New Hospital for Women, (later renamed the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital and now part of the University College London Hospitals).
She then became demonstrator in anatomy at the London School of Medicine and surgical registrar at the Royal Free Hospital. In addition to her work at the South London Hospital, in later life she was also a surgeon at the Marie Curie Cancer Hospital and senior obstetrician at the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital.
In 1917, she was one of the founding members of the Medical Women's Federation.
With her colleague Maud Chadburn she began raising funds in 1911 for a new South London Hospital for Women and Children.
At that time, such hospitals served the dual purpose of improving medical care for women and enhancing career prospects for female medical practitioners, as many hospitals refused to employ women.
Aided by her cousin Harriet Weaver and other feminists, enough money was raised to open an outpatients' department in Newington Causeway in 1912. A purpose-built eighty-bed hospital on Clapham Common, staffed entirely by women, was opened by Queen Mary on 4 July 1916.
Davies-Colley worked at the South London Hospital for Women and Children from its foundation until her death, holding various positions including senior surgeon.
She died suddenly of thyroid toxaemia in London in 1934.
Cousin of Francis Turner and cousin of Sandy Irvine.
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