Unknown, 16th century: In an early copper engraving by Lucas Van Leyden, a traveling dentist can be seen along with a woman acting as his assistant.[2]
1814: Josephine Serre became the first woman to receive a dentistry degree from the University of Tartu.[4] Her daughter Marie-Louis Serre later graduated with a dentistry degree in 1829 from the same university.[5]
1849: Polonia Sanz y Ferrer becomes the first woman in Spain to be given a license to practice dentistry by a Spanish university.
1852: Amalia Assur became the first female dentist in Sweden; she was given special permission from the Royal Board of Health (Kongl. Sundhetskollegiets) to practice independently as a dentist, despite the fact that the profession was not legally opened to women in Sweden before 1861.[2]
1855: Emeline Roberts Jones became the first woman to practice dentistry in the United States.[6] She married the dentist Daniel Jones when she was a teenager, and became his assistant in 1855.[7]
1866: Rosalie Fougelberg received a royal dispensation from Swedish King Charles XV and thus became the first woman in Sweden to officially practice dentistry since the profession had been legally opened to women in Sweden in 1861.[2]
1874: Fanny A. Rambarger became the second American woman to earn the degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery in 1874, when she graduated from the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery. She worked in Philadelphia and limited her practice to women and children only.[7]
1881: Margaret Caro became the first woman to be listed on the Dentists' Register of New Zealand.[12]
1886: Margarita Chorné y Salazar became the first female dentist in Mexico.[2]
1890: Ida Rollins became the first African-American woman to earn a dental degree in the United States, which she earned from the University of Michigan.[8][13]
1892: The Women's Dental Association of the U.S. was founded in 1892 by Mary Stillwell-Kuesel with 12 charter members.[14]
1904-1905: Faith Sai So Leong, also called Sai So Yeong, became the first Chinese-American woman to graduate from a school of dentistry and become a dentist in the United States.[17] In 1904 she became the first woman of any race to graduate from the College of Physicians and Surgeons (now the University of the PacificArthur A. Dugoni School of Dentistry).[18] In 1905 she was awarded the Doctor of Dental Surgery from that school,[19] and after a trial of the State Board of Dental Examiners, which delayed the awarding of licenses, she was granted a dental license in August 1905.[20]
1907: Frances Dorothy Gray became Australia’s first female Bachelor of Dental Science graduate; she graduated from the Australian College of Dentistry, University of Melbourne, in 1907.[2]
1907: Mathilde Athenas was the first female dentist to graduate in Réunion.[21]
1909: Minnie Evangeline Jordon established the first dental practice in the United States devoted only to pediatric patients.[22]
1961: Etelvina González Martínez was the first woman to graduate from the School of Medicine of the Medical Sciences Campus of the University of Puerto Rico.[28]
1965: Badri Teymourtash and Amir Esmael Sondoozi founded Mashhad dental school in 1965 and she became the first female dean of a dental school in 1967[29].Teymourtash was the first female dentist in Iran.[1]
1965: Fatima Nazzal became the first female dentist in Palestine upon settling in Ramallah.[30]
1975: On July 1, 1975, Jeanne Sinkford became the first female dean of an American dental school when she was appointed the dean of Howard University, School of Dentistry.[8]
1975: Jessica Rickert became the first female American Indian dentist in America upon graduating from the University of Michigan School of Dentistry in 1975. She was a member of the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation, and a direct descendant of the Indian chief Wahbememe (Whitepigeon).[31]
1977: The American Association of Dental Schools (founded in 1923 and renamed the American Dental Education Association in 2000) had Nancy Goorey as its first female president in 1977.[32]
^White, J. D.; McQuillen, John Hugh; Ziegler, George Jacob; White, James William; Kirk, Edward Cameron; Anthony, Lovick Pierce (1905). The Dental cosmos - Google Books. Retrieved 2012-08-04.
^White, J. D.; McQuillen, John Hugh; Ziegler, George Jacob; White, James William; Kirk, Edward Cameron; Anthony, Lovick Pierce (1905-01-01). The Dental Cosmos. S. S. White Dental Manufacturing Company.
^Loevy, H. T.; Kowitz, A. A. (Spring 2006). "M. Evangeline Jordon, Pioneer in Pedodontics". Journal of the History of Dentistry. 54 (1): 3–8. PMID16764231.