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Edith Louisa Cavell (/ ˈ k æ v əl / KAV-əl; 4 December 1865 – 12 October 1915) was a British nurse.She is celebrated for treating wounded soldiers from both sides without discrimination during the First World War and for helping some 200 Allied soldiers escape from German-occupied Belgium and return to active service through the spy ring known as La Dame Blanche.
Hallett, Christine E. Containing Trauma: Nursing Work in the First World War (Manchester UP, 2009) Hallett, Christine E. Veiled Warriors: Allied Nurses of the First World War (Oxford UP, 2014) Hawkins, Sue. Nursing and Women’s Labour in the Nineteenth Century: The Quest for Independence (2010) Hay, Ian. One Hundred Years of Army Nursing (1953 ...
Hallett, Christine E. Containing Trauma: Nursing Work in the First World War (Manchester UP, 2009) Hallett, Christine E. Veiled Warriors: Allied Nurses of the First World War (Oxford UP, 2014) Summers, Anne. Angels and Citizens: British Women as Military Nurses 1854-1914 (2000) Taylor, Eric. Wartime Nurse: One Hundred Years from the Crimea to ...
Christine Margaret Hallett, FRSE (born 4 May 1949) is a retired British social scientist, academic administrator, and civil servant. Biography.
The Territorial Force Nursing Service (TFNS) was established by Richard Haldane (Secretary of State for War) as part of the Army Medical Service of the newly established Territorial Force, created by his reform of auxiliary forces in the United Kingdom (UK) [1] The service was inaugurated in July 1908, and its first Matron-in-Chief was Sidney Browne, who had previously held this position in ...
Memoirs of a World War I Nurse. [S.l.] : Iuniverse Inc., 2011. ISBN 1-4620-4350-X OCLC 757082270. Gavin, Lettie. American Women in World War I : They Also Served. Niwot, Colo. : University Press of Colorado, 1997. ISBN 0-87081-432-X OCLC 35270026. Hallett, Christine E. Containing Trauma : Nursing Work in the First World War. Manchester ...
Four of the nurses were killed by enemy action including Agnes Murdoch Climie, a staff nurse who trained at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary. [53] Miss Climie was a member of the Territorial Force Nursing Service and based at a general hospital in France while she was on the staff of the 4th Scottish General Hospital, Stobhill .
In the Company of Nurses: The History of the British Army Nursing Service in the Great War (2014) McGann, Susan. The battle of the nurses: a study of eight women who influenced the development of professional nursing, 1880–1930. Scutari Press, 1992. Maggs, Christopher J., ed. Nursing history: The state of the art (Routledge, 1987) Mumm, Susan.