Gladys Nichols Milton (1924 – 1999) was a Florida midwife and advocate for women's health. She was inducted into the Florida Women's Hall of Fame in 1994.
Gladys Nichols Milton | |
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Born | Gladys Delores Nichols 1924 Walton County, Florida |
Died | 1999 |
Occupation | midwife |
Gladys Delores Nichols was born at Caney Creek in Walton County, Florida.[1] She was licensed to practice midwifery in 1959, after training with two doctors in Florala, Alabama; her training sponsored the Walton County Health Department.[2]
Gladys Nichols Milton delivered at least 2000 babies (possibly as many as 3000) in her career as a midwife. She established the clinic now known as Eleanor Milton Memorial Birthing Center in Laurel Hill, Florida in 1976.[3] In the 1980s she was active in the effort to keep traditional midwifery legal in Florida; as a result of her visibility, her clinic and home were the targets of arson.[4] The state closed her clinic temporarily, and suspended her license in the 1980s, as health code standards changed.[5]
Milton was also interested in literacy in her community, and worked for years to have a library built in north Walton County. After her death, a branch of the county library was established in Paxton, and named for Milton in honor of her efforts.[2][6]
Milton wrote two published memoirs, Why Not Me? (1993, with Wendy Bovard),[7] and Beyond the Storm (1997, with Christine Fulwylie-Bankston).[8]
Gladys Nichols Milton was herself the mother of seven children. She died in 1999, aged 75 years.[9]
In 1992, she was honored with the Sage Femme, an award of the Midwives Alliance of North America (MANA).[10] In 1994, she was inducted into the Florida Women's Hall of Fame.[1] In 2001, she was inducted into the Okaloosa County Hall of Fame. Her daughter Maria Milton continued her work after she died.[2][11] In 2015 Gladys Milton was named a “Woman of Light” by the DeFuniak Springs Woman’s Club.[9]