Telling Science

The Doctor’s bag: Dr Eleanor Baker McLaglan

On display at Northland Medical Museum is the doctor’s bag of Dr Eleanor Baker McLaglan: health camp advocate, house surgeon, rural doctor, and advocate for children’s health.

Emeritus Professor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Peter Stone, University of Auckland, and Bayley Moor, 2025




































Dr Eleanor Baker McLaglan’s doctor’s bag. Collection of Northland Medical Museum. Photography: Ellen Smith.

This leather doctor’s bag and its related contents on display at the Northland Medical Museum belonged to Dr Eleanor Baker McLaglan, a remarkable figure in the history of General Practitioners in rural New Zealand. From 1910 McLaglan was a general practitioner in Te Kōpuru, near Dargaville.  The contents of her bag reveal the scope of practice that general practitioners especially but not exclusively in rural areas were expected to have.

Many of the instruments had to be sterilised by boiling at the point of care, usually in the home or the doctor's surgery immediately prior to use. There was no central sterile supply department available with instruments cleansed, sterilised by heat or gamma radiation, and then packed in impermeable wrappers to be opened at the time of surgery.

This doctor’s bag carried it all: each instrument required for surgery and childbirth, plus various medications, were carefully stowed within. Some of the surgery undertaken was minor, such as lancing boils or removing foreign bodies, but some was what today would be considered major, requiring hospital care such as the removal of tonsils. Even in the 1930s it was not unusual for a family doctor to perform a tonsillectomy in the home.

Various instruments from Dr Eleanor Baker McLaglan’s doctor’s bag. Collection of Northland Medical Museum. Photography: Ellen Smith.

During her long medical career, Dr Eleanor Baker McLaglan frequently had to fight her way through misogyny.

Born on 13 September 1879 on French Farm in Akaroa, McLaglan later attended classes on the farm at her father's boys boarding school. She then spent two years at Otago Girls High School where she passed the matriculation exam.

Eleanor’s parents decided she should train as a doctor, and she graduated from the University of Otago Medical School in 1903 - one of just two female students in her class. To gained further experience with midwifery training, she was required to attend two births; despite training at Dunedin Hospital, she had not attended one - a problem, she suggested, that male colleagues did not have. She completed a licentiate in midwifery at the Coome Lying-in Hospital in Dublin, Ireland and returned to Aotearoa in 1904.

Various instruments from Dr Eleanor Baker McLaglan’s doctor’s bag. Photograph includes a pair of obstetric forceps within the tray for sterilizing these. Collection of Northland Medical Museum. Photography: Ellen Smith.

For the next ten years McLaglan had a variety of temporary appointments: at Seacliff and Ashburn Mental Hospitals; Northern Wairoa Hospital; and locum positions with other doctors around the country. About 1910 McLaglan moved to general practice in Te Kōpuru (Northern Wairoa), overcoming many challenges that presented themselves including a lack of finances and ongoing prejudice against female medical practitioners.

Rural medicine included perilous operations, night-time callouts, long journeys on horseback, and the many other demands of a country practice. Dr McLaglan was even consulted on the treatment of animals. During the 1913 smallpox epidemic she acted as the agent for the Department of Public Health, vaccinating Māori in settlements around Dargaville: always carrying her doctor’s bag.

She wrote in her 1965 autobiography, Stethoscope and Saddlebags, that the work there was happy and strenuous but was not well paid. “[They were] the most soul satisfying days of my life… I did the best I could for them… But after three years I was more than conscious of being inadequately trained. A vacancy for a house surgeon at Auckland Hospital was advertised. I applied for the position - as a forlorn hope.” Dr McLaglan was appointed amidst furore due to her gender and resigned two months later.

For Dr Eleanor Baker McLaglan, rural medicine included perilous operations, night-time callouts, long journeys on horseback, and the many other demands of a country practice.