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  • Florence Nightingale- Nurse, Feminist, Statistician, Author
  • Mary Todd Lincoln Considered April Her "Season of Sadness"
  • Mrs. Santa Claus - A Strong and Supportive Woman for All Seasons
  • Elizabeth Turner McCormick, Woman Voyager
  • Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Fought for Human Rights
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  • Lucy Parsons, "More Dangerous Than A Thousand Rioters"
  • Lydia Maria Francis Child Travels 'Over the River and Through the Wood'
  • Anti-Suffragists Believed Women Didn't Need the Right to Vote
  • Finland's Alexandra Gripenberg Sought Universal Women's Rights
  • From Frances Slocum to Little Bear Woman and Back Again
  • Madame Elisabeth Thible is the First Woman to Ride in a Free Floating Balloon
  • Veronica Kerler Frank Pined for Germany, But Made Milwaukee Her Home
  • Mary Humphreys Stamps, Undefeated Rebel with An Educational Cause
  • Sister Monica Is One of Milwaukee, Wisconsin's Early Pioneers
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  • Margaret Fox Kane and her Victorian Love Story
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Florence Nightingale - Nurse, Feminist, Statistician, Author

Picture
Florence nightingale founded the nursing profession, but she was also gifted in mathematics, a prolific author, and a confirmed feminist. The Florence Nightingale Museum, tucked in the grounds of St. Thomas’ Hospital in London, opposite the Houses of Parliament, celebrates Florence Nightingale and her contribution to nursing.

The Nightingale Nurses and the Nightingale Pledge

Considered the founder of the nursing profession, Florence Nightingale was born on May 12, 1820, and died on August 13, 1910. She became famous for her pioneer nursing work in the Crimean War. The London Times called her “The Lady with the Lamp,” because she walked the dark hospital wards with a lamp to light her way to comfort and tend injured soldiers.

In 1860, she founded the nursing school at St. Thomas’ Hospital in London, which was the first secular nursing school in the world. It is now called the Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwifery and is part of King’s College London.

At a service held every year on May 12 in Westminster Abbey in London, a lamp is taken from the Nurse's Chapel in the Abbey and handed from one nurse to another, symbolizing the transfer of knowledge from one nurse to another. Florence Nightingale is buried at St. Margaret's Church at West Wellow in Hampshire, and a service is always held there on the Sunday after her birthday.

Florence Follows Her Calling

Although she was born into a wealthy, genteel family, Florence Nightingale believed that she had received a divine calling to go into nursing. In 1844, she persisted in her decision, despite the passionate opposition of her mother and sister. By choosing to go into nursing, she rebelled against the Victorian expectations for women of her class to be a wife and mother. Despite the opposition of her parents and society, she worked hard to educate herself in the art and science of nursing.

Her father gave Florence an income which translating to about $50,000 dollars in modern currency, that enabled her to study and tour in Europe for several years. Eventually she returned to England and on August 22, 1853, she accepted the position of superintendent at the Institute for the Care of Sick Gentlewomen in Upper Harley Street in London.

"The Lady of the Lamp"

In 1853, the Crimean War, a dispute between the Russian Empire on one side and an alliance of the British, French, and Ottoman Empires on the other, erupted and continued until 1856. Reports about the horrible conditions that wounded soldiers endured filtered back to Britain and on October 21, 1854, Florence and a staff of 38 women volunteer nurses that she had trained were sent to Turkey where the main British camp was based. They arrived in Scutari near modern day Istanbul in November 1854, and began to care for the wounded.

Her experience with the high death rates and lack of sanitation and nutrition for the soldiers at Scutari convinced Florence that most of the soldiers at the hospital died because of poor living conditions. Her experiences in the Crimean War motivated her to crusade for sanitary living conditions and they made her known throughout the world.

Notes on Nursing, Notes on Hospitals

By the end of the Crimean War, Florence Nightingale's accomplishments included establishing her nurse's training school at St. Thomas Hospital and sending the first trained Nightingale nurses to work at the Liverpool Workhouse on May 16, 1865. She wrote Notes on Nursing, a 136 page book that served as the curriculum cornerstone for Nightingale and other nursing schools.

Notes on Hospitals, another of her popular books, deals with the correlation of sanitary techniques to medical facilities. Her work laid the foundation for the United States Sanitary Commission during the American Civil War, and she trained Linda Richards, the first professional American nurse.

Author, Mathematician, Feminist

Along with her nursing skills, Florence Nightingale was an excellent author and mathematician and she played an important role in English feminism. She became a pioneer in presenting information with statistical graphics and developed a pie chart now called the polar area diagram to illustrate nursing statistics.

As Florence Nightingale struggled with the expectations of her society and her expectations of herself, she wrote Suggestions for Thought to Searchers after Religious Truth. A section of the books called "Cassandra", protested the learned helplessness of women such as her mother and older sister and she rejected their lives of intellectual inactivity and comfort for the world of social service and intellectual growth.

American literary critic and feminist Elaine Showalter called Florence Nightingale's writing "a major text of English feminism, a link between Wollstonecraft and Woolf."

Florence Nightingale "Unrepresentative?"

Over the past few decades, British public sector union Unison has lobbied to celebrate International Nurses Day on a date other than May 12, which is Florence Nightingale’s birthday and the date that the International Council of Nurses commemorates her life. Some union members have suggested May 21, the birthday of Elizabeth Fry, another 19th century reformer who founded the Institution of Nursing Sisters before Florence Nightingale founded her nursing school and worked extensively with prisoners.

Some health workers argue that Florence Nightingale is unrepresentative of modern, multi-cultural nursing because of her white, middle class Protestant upbringing, family fortune, and reputation for a hierarchical approach to nursing.

Florence Nightingale is Still Considered the Founder of Modern Nursing

Other nurses and the Royal College of Nursing disagree with Unison. The Royal College of Nursing states that Florence Nightingale is considered the founder of modern nursing and therefore, “the whole world for decades has used her birthday to celebrate International Nurses’ Day.”

References

Dossey, Barbara, Florence Nightingale: Mystic, Visionary, Healer. Lippincott, Williams & Willing, 2000.

Bostridge, Mark, Florence Nightingale: The Making of an Icon, Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1st Edition, 2008.

Nightingale, Florence, Notes on Nursing: What It Is and What It Is Not, Dover Publications, 1969.

 

 


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  • Home
  • Women's Rooms
    • Womens Rooms-Anne
    • Womens Rooms-Abigail
    • The Dead Baby in a Blue Blanket: The
    • Rena Rides the Raindrops
  • Women at Work-Blog
  • E Books and Print Books for Sale
  • Women of Historical Complexion
  • Rachel and Elizabeth Knaggs
  • Elizabeth Stiles, President Lincoln's Spy
  • Loyalist Lucy Flucker Meets Patriot Henry Knox at a Boston Parade
  • Queen Maria Amelia, the Last Queen of Portugal, Stood Her Ground
  • The Lady and the Patriot: Theodosia Burr Alston's Fateful Voyage
  • Margaret Agnew Blennerhassett - More Character Than Riches
  • Florence Nightingale- Nurse, Feminist, Statistician, Author
  • Mary Todd Lincoln Considered April Her "Season of Sadness"
  • Mrs. Santa Claus - A Strong and Supportive Woman for All Seasons
  • Elizabeth Turner McCormick, Woman Voyager
  • Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Fought for Human Rights
  • Mary Fields, Stage Coach Mail Driver, Sharp Shooter, Faithful Friend
  • Lucy Parsons, "More Dangerous Than A Thousand Rioters"
  • Lydia Maria Francis Child Travels 'Over the River and Through the Wood'
  • Anti-Suffragists Believed Women Didn't Need the Right to Vote
  • Finland's Alexandra Gripenberg Sought Universal Women's Rights
  • From Frances Slocum to Little Bear Woman and Back Again
  • Madame Elisabeth Thible is the First Woman to Ride in a Free Floating Balloon
  • Veronica Kerler Frank Pined for Germany, But Made Milwaukee Her Home
  • Mary Humphreys Stamps, Undefeated Rebel with An Educational Cause
  • Sister Monica Is One of Milwaukee, Wisconsin's Early Pioneers
  • A Love Story for St. Valentine's Day - Marie Antoinette and Count Axel von Fersen
  • Three Wisconsin Women of the Waves
  • Margaret Fox Kane and her Victorian Love Story
  • Francoise Marie Jacquelin, Lioness of La Tour, Lioness of Acadia, Woman in Her Own Right
  • Mary Breckinridge, Circuit Riding Nurse and Founder of the Frontier Nursing Service
  • Women Bicyclists Break Their Glass Cages and Ride into Liberation
  • Maria Mitchell, America's First Woman Astronomer Demonstrated Female Scientific Aptitude
  • Queen Alexandra of Great Britain-Queen Victoria's Daughter-in-Law, Bertie's Patient Wife, and Her Own Person!
  • Chicagoan Kate Kellogg Meets a Ghost on a Train
  • Isobel Lillian Steele Went to a Party and Ended Up in a Nazi Jail
  • Madam Sophie Blanchard - "Official Aeronaut of the Restoration"
  • Women of Their Time and Place
    • Nadine Turchin Fights Alongside Her Husband in the Civil War
    • War Stories Along Lake Erie: Ordinary Women Experience the War of 1812
    • Katie Walker Tends Robbins Reef Light Near the Statue of Liberty
    • Maria Gulovich Joined the Czech Resistance
    • Pirate Fanny Campbell Freed Her Fiance and Fought the British
    • SOE Agent Andree Borrel Lived Several Lifetimes in Her 24 Years
    • Lydia Latrobe Roosevelt and the First Mississippi River Steamboat
    • Sophie Kwiatkowski Served as a New Guinea Nurse in World War II
    • Clara Zetkin Spoke Against Hitler in the German Reichstag
    • Gertrud Scholtz-Klink, Female Fuhrer, Breathed Her Nazi Beliefs
    • Nancy Leo , the Only Woman Buried in Luxembourg American Cemetery
    • Dickey Chapelle, Journalist and War Correspondent
    • Lucena Brockway Adapts to Life in the Keweenaw Copper Mining Country of Lake Superior
    • Does Mary Surrat's Ghost Haunt the Senate Chambers Seeking Justice?
    • The Ghostly Cyclist in Brooklyn's Prospect Park
  • Women of Contemporary 20th and 21st Century Complexion
    • Clara Ward Chimay, Gilded Age Princess
    • Ruth Becker's Faith Helps Her Survive the Titanic and Beyond
    • Mildred Beltmann , Wartime Wife
    • The Courage of their Cultural Convictions - Women Missionaries in China
    • Light and Radiance - Laurence Owen and Her Sabena Fellow Travelers
    • Edna St. Vincent Millay, Passionate Poet, Candle-Lit Feminist
    • Fascinating Footnote: The Goose Down Divorce
    • Olive Higgins Prouty Juggles to Balance Home and Career
    • Mother and Daughter Journalists Agnes Meyer and Katharine Graham Shaped Journalism
    • Rose Friedman and the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
    • Katharine Meyer Graham Leaves Her Mark on the Washington Post
    • Ida M. Tarbell, "Bachelor Soul," Transitional Woman, or Both?
    • Nurse Edith Cavell, the Courage to Die for Her Country
    • Sigrid Schultz Outsmarted Hermann Goering
    • Martha Dickie Sharp Saves Jewish Refugees from the Nazi Death Machine
    • Virginia Graham Pioneered in Early Television and Survived Cancer
    • Rose Conway, President Harry Truman's Secret Weapon
    • Nancy Green, Talented Entrepreneur, Transitional Symbol
    • "Surrender on Demand:" The Friendship of Mary Jayne Gold and Miriam Ebel
    • Julia K. Tibbitts - Closet Environmentalist
    • Lee Lawrence Ansberry Reconquers the World and Reshapes Her Life
  • Christmas Cheer