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Timeline of nursing history

17th century

St. Louis de Merillac
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St. Louis de Merillac
Sisters of Charity
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Sisters of Charity
  • 1633 - The founding of the Sisters (or Daughters) of Charity, Servants of the Sick Poor by Sts. Vincent de Paul and Louise de Merillac. The community would not remain in a convent, but would nurse the poor in their homes, "having no monastery but the homes of the sick, their cell a hired room, their chapel the parish church, their enclosure the streets of the city or wards of the hospital." [1]
  • 1640 - The Sisters assume charge of a hospital at Angers, France.
  • 1654 and 1656 - Sisters of Charity cared for the wounded on the battlefields at Sedan and Arras in France. [2]
  • 1660 - Over 40 houses of the Sisters of Charity exist in France and several in other countries; the sick poor are helped in their own dwellings in 26 parishes in Paris.

18th century

  • 1755- Charlotte Brown,head nurse or matron in the British Army. She traveled with Braddock’s army during the French & Indian War. She was the highest-paid and most respected woman in the army. She supervised nurses, laundresses, and cooks. She kept a diary of her experience. [3]
  • 1783 - James Derham, a slave from New Orleans, buys his freedom with money earned working as a nurse. [4]

19th century

1800s

1810s

1820s

1830s

1840s

1850s

Florence Nightingale
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Florence Nightingale
  • 1850 - Florence Nightingale begins her training as a nurse at the Institute of St. Vincent de Paul at Alexandria, Egypt [6]
  • 1853 - Florence Nightingale visits the Daughters of Charity in their Motherhouse in Paris to learn their methods. [7]
  • 1854 - Florence Nightingale, a pioneer of modern nursing, and 38 volunteer nurses are sent to Turkey on October 21 to assist with caring for the injured of the Crimean War.
  • 1855 - Mary Seacole leaves London on January 27 to establish a "British Hotel" at Balaklava in the Crimea.
  • 1856 - Biddy Mason is granted her freedom and moves to Los Angeles. She works as a nurse and midwife and becomes a successful businesswoman.
  • 1857 - Ellen Ranyard creates the first group of paid social workers in England and pioneers the first district nursing programme in London. [8]

1860s

1870s

  • 1873 - Linda Richards is graduated from the New England Hospital for Women and Children Training School for Nurses and officially becomes America's First Trained Nurse.
  • 1876 - The Japanese term 看護婦 ("Kangofu" or nurse) is used for the first time. [9]
  • 1879 - Mary Eliza Mahoney is graduated from the New England Hospital for Women and Children Training School for Nurses and becomes the first black professional nurse in the U.S. [10]

1880s

Clara Barton
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Clara Barton
  • 1881 - Clara Barton becomes the first President of the American Red Cross, which she founded, on May 21.
  • 1884 - Mary Agnes Snively, the first Ontario nurse trained according to the principles of Florence Nightingale, assumes the position of Lady Superintendent of the Toronto General Hospital’s School of Nursing.
  • 1885 - The first nurse training institute is established in Japan, thanks to the pioneering work of Linda Richards. [11]
  • 1886 - The Nightingale, the first American nursing journal, is published. [12]
  • 1886 - Spelman Seminary establishes the first nursing program in the U.S. specifically for African-Americans. [13]
  • 1888 The monthly journal The Trained Nurse begins publication in Buffalo, New York. [14]

1890s

Lillian Wald
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Lillian Wald

20th century

1900s

1910s

Edith Cavell
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Edith Cavell
Chief Nurse Higbee, USN
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Chief Nurse Higbee, USN

1920s

1930s

1940s

Erna Flegel
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Erna Flegel

1950s

  • 1951 - The National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses merges with the American Nurses Association. [28]
  • 1951 - Males join the United Kingdom same register of nurses as females for the first time.[citation needed]
  • 1951 - [National Association for Practical Nurse Education and Service]NAPNES along with professional nursing organizations and the U.S. Department of Education created Vocational Nursing standards for education and the LPN / LVN level of nursing was created in the United States.
  • 1952 - The introduction of sedatives transforms mental health nursing. [citation needed]
  • 1955 - Elizabeth Lipford Kent becomes the first African American to earn a PhD in nursing. [29]
  • 1956 - The Columbia University School of Nursing is the first in the U.S. to grant a master's degree in a clinical nursing specialty. [30]
  • 1957 - A Japanese court rules on the regulation regarding night shifts of nurses, limiting them to 8 days a month and banning single-person night shifts altogether. [31]

1960s

Dame Cicely Saunders
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Dame Cicely Saunders

1970s

1980s

1990s

Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson
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Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson

21st century

2000s


 
 
 

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