Midwife Lizzie Belle Wilson

Midwife Lizzie Belle Wilson Lizzie Bell Babies are building this page so we can come together and be a force in the community as was Midwife Lizzie Bell Ward Wilson

Where are all the Lizzie Bell BABIES? The Lizzie Bell Babies are the 3000 babies Midwife Lizzie Bell Ward Wilson delivered. We are looking for the oldest, the youngest, the first, the last baby Lizzie Bell Wilson delivered. If you are, or if you know someone who is a Belle baby, this may be of interest to them. Lizzie Bell Ward Wilson was a midwife who delivered babies from the early 1900 until 19

63. She died on November 6, 1964. We will honor her every weekend near November 6, which is the day she went on to glory She stated in a newspaper article that she became a Midwife shortly after getting married, which was early 1900. During the 1920's the mortality rate was high, especially in the rural areas for newborn and pregnant mothers. The federal government passed legislation that would provide matching funds to the states that opened health clinics and trained midwives, especially where hospitals were far away. In 1929 this legislation was defunded, but the southern states had seen the benefits of the midwife in the rural areas. This was the era in which Lizzie Bell Ward Wilson became a midwife. The earliest delivery we have knowledge of was a gentleman who stated at her funeral “She delivered me and all my children.” He was born in 1903. She delivered one of her grandchild in 1926. A newspaper article stated that she got her start as a young teen when the doctor could not travel to a house because of the rain and flood. The father asked her to help his wife and little Lizzie stated “I’ll do the best I can”. In the 1940’s, through pressure from the AMA, the push was to do more than train midwife but certify them. These ladies now had to pass a certification test. In 1943, Lizzie Bell Wilson became a certified midwife and continued to deliver babies until she retired in 1963. Therefore some of the babies she delivered started an effort to erect a proper Headstone at her gravesite. We extended this effort to all who understand the historical significance of what she accomplished. The headstone was erected November 6, 2014. Now we are raising funds to establish an endowment fund for an annual scholarship in her name. There is a place to donate. Donations can be sent to PO Box 939 Villa Rica, Ga 30180. Here on this page upload pictures, comments, stories and remarks. We are trying to find the facts, fiction and folklore and determine which is which, so we want to hear your stories. So Lizzie Bell babies, let us know who you are. Let us start a tradition. There are three times a year, we should wear our bells to signify that we were delivered by Lizzie Bell Wilson: Dec 4, her birthday, November 6, the day she died, and the day she delivered you. Therefore, we are asking that on November 6, if you cannot make to the ceremony, wear your bell that day.

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04/12/2026

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Georgia is threatening to JAIL the very midwives who could save Black women's lives, and now they're fighting back in court. More than a third of Georgia counties are classified as maternity care deserts, no OBs, no birth centers, no hospital obstetric care.

The state's maternal mortality rate sits at 30 deaths per 100,000 births.
And yet, Georgia has made it a criminal offense, punishable by fines and jail tim, for trained, experienced midwives to catch a baby.

In February, Georgia's oldest freestanding birth center shut its doors, leaving just three in the entire state. Meanwhile, the Georgia legislature just let HB520 die, a bill that would have largely decriminalized midwifery, on the final day of the session.

So three midwives took it to court.

Jamarah Amani, one of the plaintiffs, described her own labor at a Georgia hospital as traumatic, she had no autonomy over her own body and recalled being treated "more like a prisoner than a patient."

She labored in the hospital bathroom just to give birth in the position she knew was right for her. She went on to become a licensed midwife, but had to leave Georgia to do it.

Tamara Taitt, who directs the Atlanta Birth Center, is legally barred from providing clinical care to the patients at her own center. Her credential, a Certified Professional Midwife license, recognized in 39 states.

This means nothing in Georgia.

This isn't an accident. A century ago, white progressive reformers deemed Black midwives "unsanitary and superstitious" and pushed for physician oversight and burdensome restrictions. Within two decades, the number of practicing midwives in Georgia collapsed from 9,000 to just 2,000.

The goal was never safety. It was always control over womens bodies.

Black women in Georgia die in childbirth at more than twice the rate of white women.

The WHO says expanding midwifery access could prevent more than 60% of maternal and newborn deaths globally. But Georgia, backed by the AMA's fierce opposition to any expansion of non-physician scope of practice, keeps a trained workforce on the sidelines while women die.

The Center for Reproductive Rights filed suit in Fulton County Superior Court on April 2, joined by two other midwives, seeking to strike down restrictions that advocates call a direct continuation of laws designed to exclude Black providers from birth work.

This is what the war on women's bodies looks like in 2026, not just abortion bans, but criminalizing the community care networks Black women built to survive a system that was never built for them.

These midwives are fighting back. These are the hero’s we need!

02/15/2026

In March, Women History month see the article in News and Views

This is the Social media announcement. Newsletter coming out next week
02/02/2026

This is the Social media announcement. Newsletter coming out next week

02/01/2026

Winner of the Midwife Lizzie Bell Scholarship Chezney Carroll

02/01/2026

The decision has been made. We are waiting to hear from the winner of the $1000 scholarship The foundation has contacted the winner by phone ( left a message) and by email. When we know the winner has accepted, we will make the announcement

01/26/2026

On the 15 of Jan the application process for $1000 scholarship closed. The executive team is now in the process of verifying the completeness of the 85 application packets. By January 31 a decision will have been made An Announcement will be made when the overall winner has been notified and accepted. Stay tuned.

01/05/2026

Here is another link to the $1000 Scholarship Google forms

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01/05/2026

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The American College of Nurse-Midwives mourns the devastating death of Dr. Janell Green Smith, CNM, who died from complications of childbirth. Dr. Smith was a respected midwife, scholar, and advocate whose life and work reflected a deep commitment to respectful, evidence-based, and equitable care.

That a Black midwife and maternal health expert died after giving birth in the United States is both heartbreaking and unacceptable. Her death underscores the persistent and well-documented reality that Black women—regardless of education, income, or professional expertise—face disproportionate risks during pregnancy and childbirth due to systemic racism and failures in care.

We grieve Dr. Smith’s loss and recognize it as a profound failure of the systems meant to protect birthing people. In her honor, ACNM commits not only to reaffirming our values, but to intensifying our actions to dismantle racial inequities in maternal health, strengthen accountability in care systems, and work alongside Black midwives, clinicians, and communities to prevent future tragedies.

We extend our deepest condolences to Dr. Smith’s family, loved ones, and the midwifery community. We carry her legacy forward with urgency, humility, and resolve.

01/03/2026

Anyone with this link can now respond to the google Scholarship form.

Address

1605 Highway 61 VPlex
Villa Rica, GA
30180

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