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Nursing

Nursing in Canada, whose history has important chapters in Montreal and at º£½ÇÉçÇø, had inauspicious origins in this city. In 1877, the first "lady nurses" arrived at the Montreal General Hospital: a superintendent of nursing named Maria Machin and five assistants, all trained at London’s prestigious Nightingale School of Nursing. The nurses’ trained methods were quite different from the Montreal General’s routines, and the entire group of women returned to England within a short time. In 1890, after several more false starts, the hospital hired Nora Livingston, who implemented a successful program to train new nurses at the hospital. Other Montreal hospitals followed suit, notably the Royal Victoria Hospital, which had similar problems in accommodating nursing until it recruited Mabel Hersey in 1908. Hersey, like Nora Livingston, worked with the Hospital administration to direct a working program which was advantageous to all involved.

Miss. Nora Livingston, founder of School of Nursing, at her desk in the Montreal General Hospital. (photo ca. 1895). MUA PU027043.
Miss. Nora Livingston, founder of School of Nursing, at her desk in the Montreal General Hospital. (photo ca. 1895). MUA PU027043.

Nurse, Mabel F. Hersey. (photo n.d.). MUA PR039515.
Nurse, Mabel F. Hersey. (photo n.d.). MUA PR039515.

Nurse, Grace M. Fairley. (photo n.d.). MUA PR039512.
Nurse, Grace M. Fairley. (photo n.d.). MUA PR039512.

Throughout the first few decades of the programs’ existence, nurses’ training strongly resembled a trial by fire. After a few weeks of practical instruction, nursing students were expected to care for full wards of patients, often with very little supervision. By 1917, Mabel Hersey and Grace Fairley, the head of the nurses’ program at Alexandra Hospital, had conceived of a higher standard of training, conducted in a more academic setting. In 1920, the women proposed a plan for a nursing school to the board of º£½ÇÉçÇø’s Medical Faculty. The proposal was approved nearly immediately, and the º£½ÇÉçÇø School for Graduate Nurses was established in June of 1920, offering advanced training for nurses who had already earned their RN degrees.

Ward D of the Royal Victoria Hospital and the staff during Christmas. (photo 1897). MUA PR023861.
Ward D of the Royal Victoria Hospital and the staff during Christmas. (photo 1897). MUA PR023861.

Group of nurses and doctors in operating theatre. (photo ca. 1910). MUA PR026162.
Group of nurses and doctors in operating theatre. (photo ca. 1910). MUA PR026162.

Two nurses in a hospital operating theatre. (photo ca. 1910). MUA PR026166.
Two nurses in a hospital operating theatre. (photo ca. 1910). MUA PR026166.

In the next decades, the school expanded, with continuing success and outstanding graduates. In 1940, after donations from remarkably loyal alumnae had kept the school afloat during the Depression, the School for Graduate Nurses officially became part of the Faculty of Medicine. Today, after more than eight decades of continual progress and expansion, the º£½ÇÉçÇø School of Nursing offers BSc (nursing) and MSc (applied) degrees to graduates of RN programs.

Royal Victoria Hospital School of Nursing, Class of 1918. (photo 1918). MUA PR023817.
Royal Victoria Hospital School of Nursing, Class of 1918. (photo 1918). MUA PR023817.

School of Graduate Nurses, Class of 1921. (photo 1921). MUA PL006463.
School of Graduate Nurses, Class of 1921. (photo 1921). MUA PL006463.

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