Violet May Plummer







Violet Plummer was born in Camperdown, New South Wales, a daughter of schoolmaster Isaac Arthur Plummer and his wife Eleanor Alice Plummer, née Newland.
In 1878 they moved to Wallaroo, South Australia, where Isaac had secured an appointment as headmaster, then later that year, at his request, transferred to Wallaroo Bay.
Violet began studies at the Advanced School for Girls in 1887 after winning a bursary, and matriculated in 1890. She gained her BSc. at the University of Adelaide in 1893 and passed her first year's medicine subjects the same year.
She left for Melbourne in 1897 to complete the requirements for the Bachelor of Medicine rather than at Adelaide Hospital because of the "Hospital Row" (1896-1901).
A notable fellow student following the same trajectory was Frederic John Chapple, and it was possibly through this connection that she was to meet his sister Phoebe Chapple, (though they both attended the Advanced School) whom she would encourage to study medicine, and with whom she would enjoy a lifelong friendship and professional relationship. Both she and Frederic achieved second class passes, and later in 1898 she was appointed resident surgeon of the Melbourne Hospital then in 1899 resident surgeon in the infirmary department of the Woman's Hospital, Melbourne.
Her residence until 1927 was on North Terrace, two doors east of Charles Street, a two-storey property, the upper floor of which for a time served as the home of the Adelaide Lyceum Club, of which she was a longtime member. In 1962 she was still living at that address, which also contained the consulting rooms of her brother Dr. R. G. Plummer and her nephew Alexander Philip Plummer, dental surgeon.
In 1881, the University of Adelaide had been the first Australian university to admit women to academic courses, but there were no facilities for country or interstate women students. In the 1930s, a group of women graduates, which included Violet, Dr. Helen Mayo, Dr Constance Finlayson and Pauline Grenfell Price, met to solve the longstanding problem of accommodation for country and interstate female students. After being approached by Violet, Sidney Wilcox (1866–1942) of the wool brokers Wilcox, Mofflin gave ₤5000 and bequeathed his house on Brougham Place, North Adelaide to the University so that a residential college for women might be established. St. Ann's College was officially opened with sixteen residential students in 1947, much of the delay being attributable to the War.
Violet Plummer never married. Violet May Plummer was one of the first women from the University of Adelaide to graduate in medicine and in 1900 was the first woman General Practitioner to practise in Adelaide.

Profile Image - Courtesy of the State Library of South Australia, SLSA - B25677/10

