
Own this American Women Quarters Program coin honoring Dr. Mary Walker –
US Army’s First Female Surgeon
This quarter was issued in 2024 as part of the first series of US coins to honor the achievements of women. The reverse design on this quarter features an image of Dr. Walker holding her pocket surgical kit. She is wearing her Meda... more
Own this American Women Quarters Program coin honoring Dr. Mary Walker –
US Army’s First Female Surgeon
This quarter was issued in 2024 as part of the first series of US coins to honor the achievements of women. The reverse design on this quarter features an image of Dr. Walker holding her pocket surgical kit. She is wearing her Medal of Honor and surgeon’s pin. A detail of her medal is on the left side of the image. This coin was minted at the Philadelphia Mint.
About the American Women Quarters Program
The American Women Quarters Program is a multi-year tribute to women from diverse backgrounds, races, ethnicities, and parts of the US. They were chosen for their contributions to the abolition of slavery, civil rights activism, roles in government, as well as expertise in science, the arts, humanities and much more.
From 2022 through 2025, five new coins were released each year. Each coin features a distinctive reverse design honoring an American woman, along with her name, “UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,” “E PLURIBUS UNUM,” and “QUARTER DOLLAR.” The obverse side showcases a new design of George Washington.
Mary Edwards Walker was born on November 26, 1832, and was raised in a progressive household where her parents encouraged her to be a free thinker. Walker graduated from Syracuse Medical College at the age of 21 after attending three 13-week semesters of training. She then married a fellow physician and set up a medical practice in Rome, New York, but both the business and the marriage failed.
Walker tried to join the Union Army when the Civil War began but was denied a commission, so she volunteered as a surgeon. At the time, the Army didn’t allow female surgeons, so she was admitted as a nurse. Walker eventually became acting assistant surgeon making her the first female surgeon in the US Army. For two years, Walker served at the front lines. In 1863, she was appointed assistant surgeon in the Army of the Cumberland and eventually the 52nd Ohio Infantry.
Walker also served as a spy and crossed Confederate lines to treat civilians until she was taken prisoner while helping a Confederate doctor amputate a soldier’s leg. Imprisoned for four months, she was released and spent the rest of the Civil War treating patients at a prison for women in Louisville and an orphanage in Tennessee.
On November 11, 1865, President Andrew Johnson signed a bill presenting Walker with the Congressional Medal of Honor for Meritorious Service. The measure recognized her contribution to the Union cause without awarding her an Army commission. In 1917, Congress revised the Medal of Honor standards to limit eligibility to those who had done “actual combat with an enemy.” Feisty to the end, 84-year-old Walker refused to return the medal and wore it every day until her death in 1919. In 1977, an Army board reinstated the award posthumously.
Mary Edwards Walker’s father was actively involved in many of the reform movements that took place in upstate New York during the early and mid-1800s. He supported the abolition of slavery and education for women, and believed the restrictive clothing styles for women hampered their ability to succeed. Mary was also an advocate of women’s rights and believed in dress reform. She wore trousers and a man’s jacket on her wedding day and kept her maiden name.
Walker became a writer and lecturer after the war, urging action on women’s rights, dress reform, temperance, and health issues. As president of the National Dress Reform Association, she was arrested several times for wearing men’s clothing, including a top hat, wing collar, and bow tie. In response to criticism, she would say “I don’t wear men’s clothes, I wear my own clothes.” She ran unsuccessfully for Congress in 1890 and the US Senate the following year.