"During two trips to Jamaica in the winter of 1922 and the spring of 1924 I secured the names of 136 plants used for medicinal purposes among the colored peasantry, with the method of preparation and the use to which each was put. ... Brief as the list is, I believe it to be representative of present practice in Jamaica. I had it from three parishes and from such diverse informants a - and -men, accredited government midwives, house-maids and small settlers; from the isolated settlement of and from a flourishing town of white residents like . All were ready and even pleased to contribute information. Most of the plants were picked from the door-plot or beside the road as we walked ..."
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Columbia University alumniWomen academics from the United StatesAnthropologists from the United StatesWomen scientists from the United StatesVassar College faculty
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Martha Warren Beckwith
(January 19, 1871 – January 28, 1959) was an American anthropologist, ethnographer, , author, and translator. In 1918 she received from a Ph.D. in anthropology under the supervision of Franz Boas. In 1920, based upon the philanthropy of , Beckwith was hired as a research professor in folklore at . She thus became the first person to hold a professorial chair in folklore at any college or university in the United States.
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