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Patricia Harman
Patricia Harman has spent over thirty years caring for women as a midwife, first as a lay-midwife, delivering babies in cabins and on communal farms in West Virginia, and later as a nurse-midwife in teaching hospitals and in a community hospital birthing center.She spent over a decade in the... show more

Patricia Harman has spent over thirty years caring for women as a midwife, first as a lay-midwife, delivering babies in cabins and on communal farms in West Virginia, and later as a nurse-midwife in teaching hospitals and in a community hospital birthing center.She spent over a decade in the sixties and seventies in her wild youth living in rural communes in Washington (Tolstoy Farm), Connecticut (The Committee for Non-Violent Action) and Minnesota (Free Folk). During the Vietnam years, she and her husband, Tom Harman, traveled the country, often hitch-hiking, as they looked for a place to settle. In 1974 they purchased a farm with a group of like-minded friends on top of a ridge in Roane County, West Virginia. Here on the commune, they built log houses, dug a pond, grew and preserved their own food and started the Growing Tree Natural Foods Cooperative.It was during this time that Patsy attended her first home birth, more or less by accident. "Some people are destined," she has written. "I was staying at a woman friend's commune when she went into labor and I ended up delivering my first baby." Soon after, Harman traveled to Austin, Texas to train with a collective of home-birth midwives. When she returned, she became one of the founding members of The West Virginia Cooperative of Midwives. Her passion for caring for women and babies led her to become an RN as the first step in getting licensed as certified nurse midwife. In 1985, with her children, a yowling cat and her husband she traveled north, pulling a broken down trailer to begin her training at the University of Minnesota where she received her MSN in Nurse-Midwifery.Patricia Harman still lives and works with her husband, Ob/Gyn Thomas Harman, in West Virginia.. Though she no longer attends births, she provides care for women in early pregnancy and through-out the life span. She brings to this work the same dedication and compassion she brought to obstetrics.
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Silver's Reviews
Silver's Reviews rated it 10 years ago
Babies, folks helping each other, and a difficult, but wonderful era.Patience and Becky knew each other from years before and became reacquainted when Becky moved back to town with Dr. Blum who is now disabled.Patience is a midwife, and Becky is a nurse. Both women deliver babies together and share...
Brenna M's Book Blog
Brenna M's Book Blog rated it 10 years ago
The Midwife of Hope RiverPatricia Harman Paperback, 382 pages Published August 28th 2012 by William Morrow Paperbacks ISBN13: 9780062198891 The Midwife of Hope River by Patricia Harman follows Patience as an inexperienced midwife to being accepted as a part of the community she was living in. Seve...
boghunden
boghunden rated it 12 years ago
At first I wasn't sure if I wanted to read this book, because child birth is something that scares me. It just don't like them. Well, that was until I read this book!The births in this book are vacuely enough described to not scare anyone away, and yet they are there. All characters in this book are...
K.
K. rated it 12 years ago
I went into this memoir thinking it would be a modern day version of Jennifer Worth's The Midwife. I was sorely mistaken. There are barely any stories of midwifery, especially since the author's practice had discontinued OB services prior to the writing of the book.The Blue Cotton Gown was about Pat...
That's What She Read
That's What She Read rated it 12 years ago
With her background as a midwife, Patricia Harman uses The Midwife of Hope River to highlight this worthy practice back when it was a necessity rather than a luxury. This is more than a story about women giving birth however. This is a story about survival at its most elemental, when jobs and money ...
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