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Dr. Anna Darrow

Anna Darrow and her husband , Roy, graduated from the Kirksville School of Osteopathy in Kirksville, Missouri in 1905.

Anna Darrow, the second female physician to be licensed in Florida and who incidentally received the highest score ever theretofore recorded, once lived in Stuart. Her story is amazing. Anna and her husband, also a doctor, left a background of big cities to move to Okeechobee City in the summer of 1912. Just getting there from Ft. Pierce was an ordeal.

This photograph was used by Greg and Alice Luckhardt who inserted the text.

She treated pioneer settlers, Seminole Indians, and outlaws, setting broken bones and delivering babies including four sets of twins, in the crudest of circumstances. She traveled by horse and wagon, Model T Ford, by boat and ox cart as well as on foot along primitive trails . She often had to wade.

The Darrows had two children, Richard, born in 1897 and Dorothy, born in 1903. Richard, after developing tuberculosis, practiced law in Arizona. Dorothy was a teacher and librarian at Horace Mann High School in Miami for many years. Both children attended Rollins College.

This photograph was used by Greg and Alice Luckhardt who inserted the text.

The Darrow building adjoined the Raulerson Department Store overlooking the broad park, that is a predominant feature of Okeechobee City to this day.

I recently reread Lawrence Will’s Cracker History of Okeechobee. It includes a long chapter on” “Doc Anner.” Lawrence Will was the historian of the Glades who published six books. His text is in “cracker dialect” and is a far from being politically correct. However, his books contain an amazing record of a pioneer era that is long gone. His books impart an understanding of the transformation of Lake Okeechobee and the Everglades during its so called reclamation.

Here is a link to the Museum of the Glades.

Below please find the chapter of Doctor Anna Darrow.

Although it was Lawrence Will’s information packed chapter of Dr. Anna Darrow that made me want to share her story in a blog, I found that since I had learned about her years ago, she has gained acclaim.

In 2011 she was featured an article n the National Endowment for the Humanities, magazine entitled “Swamp Doctor. ” Actress, Carrie Sue Ayvar, portrayed Anna Darrow as a Florida Humanities Council presenter throughout the state.https://www.neh.gov/humanities/2011/mayjune/statement/the-swamp-doctor

In 2016, Greg and Alice Luckhardt published a lengthy and information packed Vignette in the Stuart News with Dr. Anna Darrow and her family as subjects.https://www.tcpalm.com/story/specialty-publications/your-news/martin-county/reader-submitted/2016/12/20/historical-vignettes-anna-darrow-stuarts-first-female-doctor/95651344/

It makes me proud that this amazing woman came to Stuart for a time, as can be proved from the page of the Stuart directory when the town was still within Palm Beach County.

Anna Darrow was an artist whenever she had a time for art. When she retired, she took up painting again. She even won a prize for a painting of herself doctoring in Okeechobee. Her painting is humorous. It shows Florida Wood Storks delivering one of the four sets of twins she delivered while she was in the Glades.

Dr. Anna Darrow with her prize winning painting.