The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sandy Springs dedicates road to pioneering female doctor

- By Mitchell Northam Mitchell. North am@ ajc. com

When she retired in 2001 at the age of 103, Dr. Leila Denmark was the world’s oldest practicing pediatrici­an. She was believed to be the fifirst female pediatrici­an in Georgia.

Denmark died in 2012 at the age of 114, but when she practiced she had offices in Atlanta, Forsyth County and Sandy Springs.

This week, the city of Sandy Springs will make sure she’s remembered every time a driver passes one of the city’s street signs in its new downtown area.

At 11 a.m. Thursday, the city will dedicate a new roadway for the late doctor, holding a ceremony for Denmark Drive. Attending the ceremony at the street’s inter- section with Boylston Drive will be Mayor Rusty Paul and city council members, as well Mary Hutcherson — Denmark’s daughter — and other family members.

Denmark Drive opened to traffic on April 23. It connects Roswell Road and Boylston Drive, running south of Hildebrand Drive and north of Hammond Drive.

Part of City Springs, the street has sidewalks on both sides, along with trees and on-street parking. Its intersecti­ons are not signaled but have stop signs.

Denmark was just the third woman to attend and earn an M. D. from the Medical College of Georgia. She graduated in 1928, and an outbreak in Atlanta of whooping cough in the 1930s prompted her to study the disease. Over the next six years, her work was published in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n, and in partnershi­p with Emory University and Eli Lilly & Co., she developed the fifirst pertussis vaccine.

She was born in Portal, a small town in Bulloch County, and lived in Athens after her retirement.

The city council voted to name the street for Denmark at ameeting in August 2017. The street cost $878,050 to build. A high school in Forsyth County opening this fall is also named for Denmark.

 ?? CHARLOTTE B. TEAGLE / JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Dr. Leila Denmark stands outside of her farmhouse offiffice in Alpharetta on Jan. 23, 1998. Denmark died in 2012 at the age of 114.
CHARLOTTE B. TEAGLE / JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Dr. Leila Denmark stands outside of her farmhouse offiffice in Alpharetta on Jan. 23, 1998. Denmark died in 2012 at the age of 114.

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