Esther Silveus (January 14, 1903 – April 27, 1980) was an American radiologist and medical researcher based at the Lahey Clinic in Boston from 1942 to 1967.
Silveus was born in Swissvale, Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh, the daughter of John G. Silveus and Ura Malnor Williams Silveus. She completed teacher training at Slippery Rock State Normal School in 1921,[1][2] and graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1926,[3] and earned her medical degree at the University of Pittsburgh in 1932.[4] She was president of the Pittsburgh chapter of Zeta Phi, a medical sorority.[5]
Silveus had a medical practice in Mercer, Pennsylvania after medical school.[6] From 1939 to 1941, she served a residency in radiology at the Western Pennsylvania Hospital. She was chief of the x-ray department at Good Samaritan Hospital in Lebanon, Pennsylvania in 1941 and 1942, when male specialists were called away to serve in World War II.[4][7]
In 1942 Silveus joined the Lahey Clinic in Boston,[8] and continued there as a radiologist until her retirement in 1967. She had staff privileges at several Boston hospitals, and was president and secretary of the Boston chapter of the American Medical Women's Association.[9] She was a member of the American College of Radiology and the Radiological Society of North America.[4] In 1973, she was honored as an Outstanding Alumna of Slippery Rock State College.[10]
Silveus published her medical research in academic journals including Radiology,[11] Surgical Clinics of North America,[12] JAMA Internal Medicine,[13] and The Journal of Clinical Investigation.[14]
Esther Silveus married Elmer S. Carlson in 1948. They restored a farm in Groton, Massachusetts, and gave much of the farm's produce to her colleagues at the Lahey Clinic.[18] She died at a hospital in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1980, aged 77 years.[19]