Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Organised district nursing in England is considered to have begun in 1859. In 1858 Liverpool philanthropist William Rathbone employed a nurse, Mary Robinson, to take care of his wife at home during her final illness. [9]
Nurse Anderson is religious, joining a local Black house church after finding a larger, White-majority congregation unwelcoming of her "kind". She sometimes expresses prudishness, such as when Nurse Dyer asked for her assistance with a sex education class, but she ultimately shows tolerance for the changing times and environment.
Realizing Rights was founded in October 2002 by Mary Robinson; Mary Robinson Calls for Global Climate Justice Fund Archived 8 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine – video report by Democracy Now! Lecture transcript and video of Robinson's speech at the Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace & Justice at the University of San Diego, March 2005 ...
Rachel Robinson (born 1922), wife of baseball star Jackie Robinson; Elaine Roe, U.S. Army nurse, one of the first four women to be awarded the Silver Star; Edith MacGregor Rome President of the Royal College of Nursing 1933–1934 and 1937–1938; Debbie Rowe (born 1958), wife of singer Michael Jackson
Elisabeth Robinson Scovil (commonly written Elizabeth Robinson Scovil, [2] 1849 – 1934) was a nurse born in New Brunswick. She was among the first to graduate from the Boston Training School for Nurses (now, Massachusetts General Hospital School of Nursing ).
The Nurse Corps has a distinctive insignia of a single Oak Leaf, on one collar point, or in place of a line officer's star on shoulder boards. Navy Nurse Corps officers (2900s) are eligible to earn and wear the Fleet Marine Force, Surface, Basic Parachutist Badge, Navy and Marine Corps Parachutist insignia, Air Crew and Flight Nurse warfare badges.
Mary Eliza Mahoney (May 7, 1845 – January 4, 1926) was the first African-American to study and work as a professionally trained nurse in the United States. In 1879, Mahoney was the first African American to graduate from an American school of nursing.
Hubert de Sevrac, a Romance of the Eighteenth Century (1796) is a Gothic novel by the celebrity actress and poet Mary Robinson.Its protagonists are a fictional French aristocrat Hubert de Sevrac and his daughter Sabina, who experience a series of dramatic travails after fleeing the French Revolution.