Amelia Dranga


Amelia Dranga was an American medical doctor and public health educator, based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Early life

Amelia A. Dranga was born in Otsego, Wisconsin, and raised in California, the daughter of Niels G. O. Dranga and Emily Ogden Dranga. Both of her parents were born in Norway. Her younger sisters Mary Dranga Campbell and Wilhelmina Dranga Campbell both found careers in blind education. Her brother Theodore Dranga married artist Helen Thomas Dranga. She was educated at the California State Normal School in Los Angeles, and at Radcliffe College. She earned her medical degree at the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania.

Career

Amelia Dranga taught school in Los Angeles before going east to medical school. From its founding in 1900 until her death 33 years later, she was the medical director of the Pittsburgh Milk and Ice Fund Association, and ran a popular twice-weekly baby clinic as part of that work. She served on the executive board of the American Birth Control League's Pennsylvania branch. She lectured on subjects from child nutrition to eugenics to sex education to Pittsburgh community groups. She was also president of the Woman's Medical Society of Western Pennsylvania. She was one of the women doctors who planned a hospital for women and children in Pittsburgh in 1902. "I do not think that there is another profession which offers such advantages to women as does the medical," Dranga declared in 1909.

Personal life

Late in life, Dranga publicly described "regret" that she had never married. Amelia Dranga died in 1933, aged 67 years, in Pittsburgh. The University of Pittsburgh medical school offered Amelia Dranga Scholarships in her memory, funded by the Congress of Women's Clubs of Western Pennsylvania, for women pursuing medical careers.