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Dr. James Barry (vegetarian): The Extraordinary 56-Year Secret Life of a Surgeon, Part 1 of 2

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In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, rigid social hierarchies barred women from education, professions, and public authority, making ambition itself a transgression. Assuming an alternative public identity was not a flight into fantasy but a means of survival, an uncompromising response to a society that denied women entry into professional life.

The illustrious medical career of Dr. James Barry, MD (vegetarian), a 19th-century military surgeon in the British Army, was shaped by a closely guarded secret, one revealed only after Dr. Barry’s passing at the age of 76. Dr. Barry rose through the ranks of the British military to become its highest-ranking medical officer, Inspector General, and is also credited with performing the first recorded successful caesarean section in the British Empire in which both mother and child survived. Additionally, Dr. Barry is widely credited with pioneering important hospital sanitation improvements and healthcare reforms – such as better hygiene, ventilation, and diet standards – many of which influenced modern practices.

Shortly after Dr. James Barry passed away in London on July 25, 1865, extraordinary reports began to circulate following preparation of the body: James Barry’s body was female and bore stretch marks indicating she had given birth many years earlier. Astonished, high-ranking officials of the British government moved quickly to suppress press coverage across the British Isles, deeming the case too shocking for the social sensibilities of the era. The British Army, deeply embarrassed, placed an embargo on Dr. Barry’s military records for 100 years. Only decades later did historians begin to investigate and piece together the details of a life that had been so carefully concealed.

The person who lived virtually their entire life as James Miranda Steuart Barry had been born Margaret Ann Bulkley in Cork, Ireland, around 1789. She was the second of three children in a Catholic family and was raised, more or less, like any other girl of that era – until necessity and aspirations demanded an audacious reinvention.
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