Dorothy Kinney Chambers

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Dorothy Joy Kinney Chambers
BornSeptember 16, 1901

Dorothy Joy Kinney Chambers (born September 16, 1901, Albuquerque, New Mexico[1] -December 3, 2001 Fort Collins, Colorado)[2] was a missionary physician who treated American military inmates at the Santo Tomas Internment Camp.[3]

Early life and education

Chambers’ parents were Edwin Bruce McKinney, a Baptist minister, and Mabel E. Alger Kinney.[1]

Before Chambers graduated as salutatorian of her class at the University of Colorado School of Medicine (Class of 1926), she earned her BS from Denison University in 1923.[1] She went to northeast India for ten years after graduating to work with the poor.[3]

While there, she met Fred Chambers who was a widowed Baptist minister and they married in 1936. They moved to the Philippines in 1939 as WWII was starting in Europe and Chambers began to work at a mission hospital. When Japan took over the Philippines, Dorothy, Fred and their two young children were sent to internment camps at an Iloilo prison and the campus of University of Santo Tomas in Manila. They were there from April 1942 until February 1945.[3]

They returned to Colorado after the war living in Boulder and Fort Collins. After her husband died, she would tell her story around the country on the lecture circuit.[3]

Publications about Chambers

  • Pullen L. Dorothy Kinney Chambers: a most valiant woman. Am Baptist Q. 1999;18(4):389-95. PMID 21174919.
  • Schwaner, Mary and Bobbi Chambers Hawk: Courage in a White Coat

References

  1. ^ a b c "Dr. Dorothy Joy Kinney Chambers". University of Colorado School of Medicine. Retrieved September 10, 2022.
  2. ^ Sch waner, Mary. "Chronology". Mary Scwaner. Retrieved September 10, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d Associated Press (December 28, 2018). "Book focuses on trailblazing Colorado missionary physician". The Gazette. Retrieved September 10, 2022.