BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY
Temple, Ruth Janetta (1892-1984)
Image Ownership: Public Domain
In 1918 Ruth Temple became the first black female to graduate from Loma Linda University. In that same year she opened the first health clinic in the medically underserved community of southeast Los Angeles. Unable to secure financial support to sustain the clinic, Temple and her husband, real estate developer Otis Banks, bought a house in east Los Angeles which they converted into the Temple Health Institute which provided free medical services and created the Health Study Club program which provided health education to parents, teachers, and school children. The health clinic’s model was duplicated in communities across the nation.
Ruth Temple’s internship in maternity service at the Los Angeles Health Department (1923-28) inspired her to specialize in obstetrics and gynecology. In 1941 the Los Angeles Health Department offered her a scholarship to pursue her Master’s degree in public health at Yale University. Despite the prevailing racial prejudices, Temple was on the teaching staff of White Memorial Hospital in Los Angeles where she taught white medical students. She held many prominent positions with the Los Angeles Public Health Department from 1942 to 1962 and received numerous awards and honors. In 1983 the East Los Angeles Health Center was renamed the Dr. Ruth Temple Health Center. In 1984, Dr. Ruth Temple died in Los Angeles at the age of ninety-one.
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