Background
Vickery was born in Devon in 1844 to a piano maker and organ builder.
Vickery was born in Devon in 1844 to a piano maker and organ builder.
By 1861, she had moved to South London. Vickery began her medical career at the Ladies Medical College in 1869. There she met the lecturer Charles Robert Drysdale and started a relationship with him.
The society, however, generally presumed that the pair were married.
Had their contemporaries known that they were in a free union, their careers likely would have suffered. Vickery sometimes added Drysdale"s name to her own, referring to herself both as "Doctor Vickery Drysdale" and as "Doctor Drysdale Vickery".
In 1873, Vickery obtained a midwife"s degree from the Obstetrical Society. On 18 June the same year, she passed the Royal Pharmaceutical Society"s exam and became the first qualified female chemist and druggist.
Afterward, Vickers went to study medicine at the University of Paris, as women were not allowed to attend any British medical school.
The Medical Practitioners Acting 1876 allowed women to obtain medical degrees, and Vickery returned to England in 1877. In 1880, she became one of five women who qualified as physicians in the kingdom, obtaining her degree from the London School of Medicine for Women, and started practising medicine. When she was called to testify at the trial, she spoke about the dangers of too frequent childbirths and of using over-lactation as a contraception method.
She had to temporarily withdraw from the League, however, because the London Medical School for Women did not approve of her activities.
She resumed membership in 1880, when she obtained her degree, and spent the following decade lecturing about birth control as a key element to the emancipation of women. At the same time, she actively opposed the Contagious Diseases Acts.
Both Vickery and Drysdale joined the Legitimation League, set up in 1893, and campaigned for equal rights for children born out of wedlock. Vickery felt that the organisation "did not go far enough" until it started advocating free love.
She regularly addressed meetings of the local branch of the Women"s Freedom League.
She died of pneumonia on 12 January 1929, a few days after delivering an address that became her final public presentation. Their son was Charles Vickery Drysdale FRSE (1874-1961).
Vickery became a member of the Malthusian League and an outspoken supporter of birth control after the trial of Annie Besant and Charles Bradlaugh, who were arrested for publishing a book about contraception in 1877. She was successively a member of the National Society for Women"s Suffrage, the Women"s Social and Political Union, and the Women"s Freedom League. Soon afterward, she became one of the first members of the Eugenics Education Society.