Nursing the English from plague to Peterloo, 1660–1820

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Alannah Tomkins
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Nursing the English analyses the reputations and experiences of women and men who nursed the sick in the period before any calls for nursing reform. It begins in 1660, since the separation of sick nursing from childcare nursing can be dated to the final third of the seventeenth century, and to include the final epidemic of plague. It concludes in 1820, the year of Florence Nightingale’s birth. This was coincidentally the same year which saw the first European publication calling for the founding of a Protestant nursing sisterhood, a movement which eventually propelled the drive for nurse training. Chapters focus on domestic nursing by women, the long history of nursing at St Bartholomew’s Hospital in London, the careers of women recruited to nurse in provincial infirmaries, and the lives of ‘matrons’ who nursed old soldiers at the Royal Hospital Chelsea. The final two chapters pull together the evidence for nursing by men, the conflicts with normative masculinity that lay in wait for male carers, and the plethora of intentional and ad hoc nursing by both women and men as a result of Britain’s wars with France between 1793 and 1815. The purpose of this volume is to make a decisive statement in contradiction to the stereotype of the pre-reform nurse as ignorant, illiterate, and drunk, to characterise her (and also him) as working well in context. Gender, status, and proximity to ‘dirty work’ provide an essential framework for understanding the challenges of nursing before reform.

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