Her reputation spread as she treated families, ranchers, loggers, railroad workers, and even an occasional horse or cow, which was not uncommon at the time.The vast majority of her patients required her to make house calls, though she never owned a horse or a car.
Susan Anderson, M.D.
After she graduated from high school in 1891, her family moved to Cripple Creek, Colorado after gold had been discovered there. In 1900, Anderson’s younger brother died, her fiance left her, and Susan decided to leave the mining camp.Needing a more cold and dry climate for her illness, Anderson made the decision to move to Fraser, Colorado in 1907. Over time, the mountain air did help Susan recover from her illness, and when she felt better, she began to practice medicine again. Susan Anderson, often known as “Doc Susie,” was born in 1870 in Indiana. Her mother, my grandmother, worked there for over 30 years. Anderson was born in 1870 in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and later moved to Kansas. She then moved to Greeley, where she worked as a nurse for six years. Our cookies are delicious. Veterans Christmas Party at the VA Hospital Her fiancée left her and her younger brother died. My mother, RIP, was one such a woman.
Susan Anderson, M.D.
Her father and mother had divorced, and Susan lived with her father, a farmer, and her grandmother and younger brother, John. Then they bought a restaurant which my parents owned for over 30 years. Quinn, Medicine Woman. is undoubtedly the most recognizable figure from Fraser's past. He even offered to pay for her schooling. She got stage 4 lung cancer, but worked until 2 months before she died. There are many in Fraser who still remember this remarkable woman, who came to live in Fraser in 1907, at the age of 37. She nailed pallets and crates by hand, for over 20 years. Susan Anderson, M.D. Susan Anderson was born on January 31, 1870, in Nevada Mills, Indiana. Fraser frequently has the lowest temp in the country.We use cookies. is undoubtedly the most recognizable figure from Fraser's past. Doc Susie continued to practice in Fraser until 1956. The west portal of the Moffat Tunnel can be seen from the Winter Park Resort.The German Pow Camp existed in Fraser during the wartime years of 1945 to January, 1946 &��/�$�nI�I�Q0��F")�-[�k���ˡ7�qy(xe���x�Ql�"Mx� 9′ or 10′ on the ground in March.
She died in 1960 at the age of 90.The remains of the roadbed comprise most of the popular summer driving route called the Moffat Road. h�bbd```b``��] ��.�d_f7�es��l0� ����W���� "�HFu �4�8�m 1 ��"��E������ @���� �sG+Н��.d`��&�k 6�� Susan Anderson, often known as “Doc Susie,” was born in 1870 in Indiana. She was born in 1870 in Indiana and went to medical school before starting her own practice. ��b��x��c((��.��������v���V�(����NRe�������Y�y:�+����}��X|�X��*�)��ۃ�����,��&�����-�)�lvX����o�ώ���ٔ����9V��L'������ij0�b_4U'��"�~�\�U����������ׯ��o�OfU��Y5����q0�۫v�uv�(�����v\)���?�Yb��],���0�v}�P�:���Y��r���^N�L�kcs-��I�{�҆�h�\P@tlP�'}�h�V�� ��8x��p]g�ьO;'N+���v$��T�n�M!�.���6�|���Y��Վ The Needle's Eye tunnel, along the Moffat Road has collapsed; therefore, this route does not provide a vehicle connection to Rollinsville, Colorado. She earned the townspeople’s trust Doc Susy in Cripple Creek, Colorado, photo Denver Public Library.Born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, Anderson’s family moved to Kansas where Susan graduated high school in 1891. In 1897, she graduated from University of Michigan as a physician. 134 0 obj <>stream Susan then became sick with tuberculosis, which was very common at the time.The mountain climate often helped to cure tuberculosis, so Susan moved to the tiny mountain town of Fraser.
�I����B3 )bQ�E��P h��d��L)�qT��'�Q�c��ae� My mother, after that job, worked another for a couple of years.