Health and Medicine: Public Health Nurses
The Public Health Nurse. She answers humanity's call. Gordon Grant. [between 1914 and 1918]. Prints and Photographs Division. LC-USZC4-7760 bibliographic record |
Although World War I led to a marked increase in the number of women involved in public health nursing, many women had entered
the field years earlier as part of settlement house work and other Progressive reform initiatives.
Nurse, author, and public health activist Lavinia L. Dock (1858-1956)
[catalog record] collected writings on various aspects of nursing as well as other papers (350 items; 1908-49; bulk 1935-38) relating to
her involvement with the International Council of Nurses, the American Association of the Red Cross, and the Henry Street
Settlement in New York City.
The papers (3,000 items; 1891-1969; bulk 1910-69) of nurse Florence Deakins Becker (1878-1969)
[catalog record] relate principally to her crusade against tuberculosis and cancer.
Documents concerning the Visiting Nurses Association are among the papers of Helen Newell Garfield (1866-1930) included in
the James Rudolph Garfield Papers (70,000 items; 1879-1950; bulk 1890-1932)
[catalog record].
After serving as a nurse in France during World War I, Mary Breckinridge (1881-1965), went to England to study midwifery and then returned to the United States to found the Kentucky Committee for
Mothers and Babies in 1925, which became known three years later as the Frontier Nursing Service (FNS), a social welfare project
aimed at providing medical care to families living in inaccessible mountain communities. Documents regarding the FNS may be
found in the Mary Breckinridge files in the Breckinridge Family Papers
[catalog record].
As a young woman, photojournalist Mary Marvin Breckinridge Patterson (b. 1905) served as a guide and courier for doctors associated with her cousin's Frontier Nursing Service. She later made
a film about the project now held in the Library's Motion Picture, Broadcasting and Recorded Sound Division. Patterson's papers
(1 volume; 1939-40) consist of radio transcripts documenting her years as a correspondent during World War II, but additions
to this collection are expected, which will cover her FNS work, her career as a photojournalist, and her philanthropic activities
as a community activist and diplomat's wife. Throughout her life, Patterson financially supported the work of the FNS, serving
at times as national honorary chairman and active member of the Frontier Nursing Service, Washington Committee, a fund-raising group whose records (350 items; 1976-1994) [catalog record] are also held in the Manuscript Division.
[Top] |