Background
Myra Adele Logan was born in Tuskegee, Alabama in 1908 to Warren and Adella Hunt Logan. Her mother was college-educated and involved in the suffrage and health care movements. Her father was treasurer and trustee of Tuskegee Institute.
Myra Adele Logan was born in Tuskegee, Alabama in 1908 to Warren and Adella Hunt Logan. Her mother was college-educated and involved in the suffrage and health care movements. Her father was treasurer and trustee of Tuskegee Institute.
After finishing her early education in Tuskegee, she attended Atlanta University and graduated as valedictorian of her class in 1927. She then moved to New York and attended Columbia University where she earned her Master of Surgery degree in psychology. She graduated in 1933.
She was the first woman to perform open heart surgery and the first African American woman elected a fellow of the American College of Surgeons. She worked for the Young Women’s Christian Association in Connecticut before opting for a career in medicine. Logan was the first person to receive the Walter Gray Crump Scholarship for Young Women, a four-year, $10,000 scholarship that allowed her to attend New York Medical College.
She interned and had her residency at Harlem Hospital.
Logan married painter Charles Alston on April 8, 1944. They met while he was working on a mural project at the Harlem Hospital, where Logan was a medical intern at the time.
Logan served as a model for Alston"s Modern Medicine, in which she appears as a nurse holding a baby. She was also a visiting surgeon at Sydenham Hospital and maintained a private practice.
In 1943 she became the first woman to perform open heart surgery in the ninth operation of its kind.
She also worked to develop antibiotics, including Aureomycin. During the 1960s she researched the early detection and treatment of breast cancer. She developed x-ray processes that could more accurately detect differences in tissue density, allowing tumors to be discovered earlier.
She was published in a number of medical journals and was one of the first black women to be elected to the American College of Surgeons.
Logan was a founding partner and treasurer of the Upper Manhattan Medical Group of the Health Insurance Plan, one of the first group practices in the United States. She also worked with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People"s Health Committee, the New York State Fair Employment Practices Committee, the National Cancer Committee and Planned Parenthood.
In 1944 she resigned from the commission with seven other members after Dewey shelved antidiscrimination legislation they had drafted. She retired in 1970 and later served on the New York State Workmen"s Compensation Board.
She died of lung cancer at Mount Sinai Hospital on January 13, 1977.
She was a member of the New York State Commission on Discrimination during Governor Thomas East. Dewey"s administration.