The History Of Nursing

  • Dorothea Dix

    Superintendent of Union Army nurses during the war. She was a teacher and a reformer of mental hospitals, who at the outbreak of the war was charged with recruitment of nurses and supervision of nursing activities. She also improved treatment of the insane in the 1850s, influencing Italy and other countries to build new hospitals and improve their treatment of the insane.
  • Mary Ann Bickerdyke

    Mary Ann Bickerdyke was a hospital administrator for Union soldiers during the American Civil War. She became the best known, most colorful, and probably most resourceful Civil War nurse. By the end of the war, with the help of the U.S. Sanitary Commission, she had built 300 hospitals and aided the wounded on 19 battlefields.
  • Linda Richards

    Linda Richards was the first professionally trained American nurse. She established nursing training programs in the United States and Japan, and created the first system for keeping individual medical records for hospitalized patients.In 1872, Linda Richards became the first student to enroll in the beginning class of five nurses in the first American Nurse’s training school.
  • Clara Barton

    Clara Barton is best remembered for organizing the American Red Cross in 1881. She was also started an agency to obtain and distribute supplies to wounded soldiers after the Battle of Bun Run.
  • Julia Stimson

    Durring World War I she served as a cheif nurse of the American Expeditionary Forces. Following the war she served as the dean of the Army School od Nursing and was appointed the superintendent of the Army Nurse Corps.
  • Isabela Hampton/Robb

    Isabel Hampton Robb was one of the founders of American nursing theory and an important leaders in the history of nursing. One of her most notable contributions to the nursing education system was the implementation of a grading policy for nursing students. Also, in 1889 she was appointed head of the new Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, where she continued to suggest reforms, participated in teaching, and published the text Nursing: Its Principles and Practice.
  • Mary Nutting

    Mary Adelaide Nutting was an American educator, administrator, and author in the field of nursing. In 1907 she joined the faculty of Teachers College, Columbia University and became the world's first professor of nursing. Nutting led the Department of Nursing and Health at Teachers College from 1910 until her retirement in 1925.
  • Mary Mahony

    Mary Eliza Mahoney was the first African-American nurse. She graduated in 1879 and in 1908 she co-founded the National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses (NACGN).
  • Margaret Sanger

    Margaret Sanger was a nurse and American birth control activist and the founder of the American Birth Control League (which eventually became Planned Parenthood). In 1914, Sanger launched "The Woman Rebel", a monthly newsletter promoting contraception.
  • Mary Breckinridge

    Mary Breckinridge was an American nurse/midwife. She started family care centers in the Appalachian mountains and was known for helping many people with her hospitals. In 1925 she founded the Kentucky Committee for Mothers and Babies, which soon became the Frontier Nursing Service.
  • Ida Moffett

    In 1943 Ida Moffett organized the first unit of Cadet Nurse Corps in Alabama, a federal program of the Public Health Service that was established to overcome a shortage of nurses, and oversaw construction of a second building for the School of Nursing.
  • Lillian Harvey

    Lillian Holland Harvey graduated nursing school on 1933. She became the Dean of Nursing at Tuskegee Institute in Alabama in 1948 and started the state's first baccalaureate of nursing program.
  • Dorthea Orem

    Dorothea Elizabeth Orem was a nursing theorist and founder of the Orem model of nursing, or Self Care Deficit Nursing Theory, that states that nurses have to supply care when the patients cannot provide care to themselves which she published in 1959.
  • Virginia Henderson

    Virginia Henderson, was an American nurse, researcher, theorist and author. She is most famous for her definition of nursing: "The unique function of the nurse is to assist the individual, sick or well, in the performance of those activities contributing to health or its recovery (or to peaceful death) that he would perform unaided if he had the necessary strength, will or knowledge".In 1985 she was presented with the first Christianne Reimann Prize from the International Council of Nurses.
  • Lillian Wald

    Lillian D. Wald is the founder of American community nursing. She was also very concerned with the horrible treatment of African-Americans, and as a consequence, she was one of the seminal founders, in 1909, of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People).
  • Annie Goodrich

    Annie Goodrich was most remembered for being a pioneer in starting the Army School of Nursing, which was founded in 1918. Once it opened, she was elected as Dean.