Background
After her mother"s death when she was 15, Farner was brought up by her elder sister.
After her mother"s death when she was 15, Farner was brought up by her elder sister.
In 1877 she completed her medical degree, only the second Swiss woman to do so, and continued her training in Vienna, Paris and Budapest before returning to Zurich to open a practice.
After leaving school, she worked as a governess in Scotland for eight years. After nursing several family members through illness, she became disillusioned with her previous choice of career. Deciding instead on medicine, she first gained the necessary school-leaving certificate (teaching herself Latin and mathematics in record time) before entering Zurich University in 1871.
During the thirty-six years it operated, the practice grew to be one of the biggest in the city and, despite offering free service to the poor, Farner had amassed a not insignificant fortune.
Beyond the medical world, Farner put her considerable talent in public speaking to good use in the leading role she played in the Swiss women"s movement. Under her leadership, the Swiss Worker"s Union secured a placement centre for female domestic servants, a women"s clinic and a sanatorium for women in Urnasch (in 1907 she donated this to the city of Zurich for use as a holiday camp).
Despite no evidence, Farner and Pfrunder were imprisoned for seven months in solitary confinement before eventual acquittal following a drawn-out investigation by one General Judge Wittelsbach. Their release garnered support for their cause from other women"s movements Europe-wide and led to Meta von Salis-Marschlins in an editorial in the commemorative issue of Philanthropin calling for universal suffrage, as only this could prevent such an injustice happening again and “that women have to be employed in government, court, police, prison authorities, in short, wherever women's interest are concerned.” Returning to work after the courtcase and she continued her practice until her death in 1913.
Following the death of Pfrunder in 1925, their house was gifted to the Zurich section of the Lyceum Club.
Furthermore they established the Anna-Carolina Foundation to support female students, an organisation that continues to award scholarships to this day. Her life has also become the subject of a novel by Rosemarie Keller entitled Ich bereue nicht einen meiner Schritte. Leben und Prozess der Ärztin Caroline Farner (or I do not Regret Any of my Actions: the Life and Trial of Doctor Caroline Farner)
Farner lived with Anna Pfrunder for thirty-two years, first in Pfrunder"s parents" house and then, following friction, in a house of their own.
The Villa Ehrenberg, Rämistrasse 26 in Zurich.