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Florence Nightingale to Her Nurses
Coles
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Florence Nightingale to Her Nurses in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $19.99


By None
Florence Nightingale to Her Nurses in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $19.99
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Size: Paperback
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Between 1872 and 1900 Miss Nightingale used, when she was able, to send an annual letter or address to the pro¬bationer-nurses of the Nightingale School at St. Thomas' Hospital, "and the nurses who have been trained there." These addresses were usually read aloud by Sir Harry Ver-ney, the chairman of the Nightingale Fund, in the presence of the probationers and nurses, and a printed copy or a lith¬ographed facsimile of the manuscript was given to each of the nurses present, "for private use only." A few also were written for the Nightingale Nurses serving in Edinburgh. The letters were not meant for publication, and indeed are hardly suitable to be printed as a whole as there is nat¬urally a good deal of repetition in them. Since Miss Night¬ingale's death, however, heads of nursing institutions and others have asked for copies of the addresses to be read or given to nurses, and her family hope that the publication of a selection may do something to carry further the intention with which they were originally written.
Between 1872 and 1900 Miss Nightingale used, when she was able, to send an annual letter or address to the pro¬bationer-nurses of the Nightingale School at St. Thomas' Hospital, "and the nurses who have been trained there." These addresses were usually read aloud by Sir Harry Ver-ney, the chairman of the Nightingale Fund, in the presence of the probationers and nurses, and a printed copy or a lith¬ographed facsimile of the manuscript was given to each of the nurses present, "for private use only." A few also were written for the Nightingale Nurses serving in Edinburgh. The letters were not meant for publication, and indeed are hardly suitable to be printed as a whole as there is nat¬urally a good deal of repetition in them. Since Miss Night¬ingale's death, however, heads of nursing institutions and others have asked for copies of the addresses to be read or given to nurses, and her family hope that the publication of a selection may do something to carry further the intention with which they were originally written.

















