Review of \u3ci\u3eThe Notorious Dr. Flippin: Abortion and Consequence in the Early Twentieth Century\u3c/i\u3e by Jamie Q. Tallman

Abstract

Born into slavery, the child of Hugh Flippin and one of his slaves, Vera Denipplf, the teenage Charles Flippin joined the 14th United States Colored Troops Company A in Chattanooga, Tennessee, in 1864. While enlisted, he learned to read. Following the war, he married, had two children, and, following his wife\u27s death, moved to Kansas to start a farm. In the 1880s, Flippin apprenticed with an eclectic physician in Kansas and traveled to the Bennett College of Medicine in Chicago for further study. The local newspaper announced his return as the only colored medical graduate in the state of Kansas

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