Exhibition: Florence Nightingale at Cromford Mills
Kristin Buhnemann2024-04-30T13:35:45+00:0027th July - 31st October
27th July - 31st October
Central Home of the Liverpool Queen Victoria District Nursing Association.
Dates from 19th Century
Features Florence Nightingale, Mother Theresa and Princess Diana.
A statue of Nightingale in the USA.
A statue at The Basilica of Santa Croce.
Money generated from the movie were donated to the Royal College of Nursing.
Commemorative stamps from 1970.
Florence's favourite fragrances.
Celebrations marking the centenary of Florence Nightingale’s birth in 1920.
Nightingale ordered "beef tea" from Fortnum and Mason.
Starring Elisabeth Risdon.
Nursing school in Brazil.
Romsey Abbey dedicates a new stained-glass window.
First historical woman to feature on an English bank note.
The asteroid was named after Florence Nightingale
In 1910 a public memorial service for Nightingale was held at St Paul’s Cathedral.
Poem written after the Crimean War.
Nightingale was known to be fond of curry and was the inspiration for this recipe.
Former nurse and General Secretary of the Royal College of Nursing.
Registered nurse.
University of Rio de Janeiro.
Video footage from 1940.
A military nurse serving in the British Army.
International alumni group of the Florence Nightingale Foundation.
Nurses are allowed to prescribe medicine.
Pioneered raising awareness around HIV/AIDS and women’s health in Southern Africa.
A nurse in the novel ‘Martin Chuzzlewit’ by Charles Dickens.
Founded by Florence Nightingale.
Promotional video from 1939.
British Nurse who was the first registered nurse in the UK.
First person to be appointed to the new role of Chief Midwifery Officer.
Nightingale Training School graduate who became Superintendent of St Mary’s Hospital.
Nightingale Nurse who cared for artist Feliks Topolski RA.
Oldest nursing charity in the world and works to improve the nursing care of people in their own homes.
To promote male nurses.
Given to Edith Mary Heale in 1916.
Nurse from Ireland who studied at the Nightingale Training School for Nurses.
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To commemorate the Nightingale Training School for Nurses.
Descendant of Nightingale’s original Training School for Nurses at St Thomas’ Hospital.
First professionally-trained American nurse.
Most senior advisers on nursing.
Trained at the Nightingale Training School for Nurses.
To Helen Blower in 1874.
Referred to as the ‘Florence Nightingale of Panay’.
Created the Mary Seacole Centre for Nursing Practice.
Established by Dame Alicia Lloyd Still in 1928 and is still active today.
Trained at the Nightingale Training School for Nurses.
Aims to equip and empower the next generation of nurses.
First maternity hospital in the UK.
French commemorative bronze medallion.
An English businessman and philanthropist.
Programme for career starters.
Second World War nurses named after Florence Nightingale.
Born in India and studied at the Nightingale Training School.
Scottish nurse who trained at the Nightingale Training School.
Scottish nurse and academic.
Founder of the The Old War Horse Memorial Hospital in 1934 in Cairo.
Nightingale advocated for women's health care in India.
Florence wanted to improve conditions for people in India.
English social reformer and champion of women’s rights.
Florence became an expert on the subcontinent.
Originally founded as the ‘College of Nursing’ in 1916.
Marked the acknowledgement in English law that the state had a responsibility to provide hospitals.
Scottish physician and supporter of sanitary science.
Inspired by Nightingale, in 2020 the charity ME Action is seeking to illustrate the links between disabled campaigners across the centuries.
Giuseppe Garibaldi was an Italian general and revolutionary, and a leading figure in the unification of Italy.
Regulator for nursing and midwifery professions in the UK.
Nightingale believed every famine was an avoidable tragedy.
Nightingale believed money was better spent in maintaining health in infancy and childhood than in building hospitals to cure disease.
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Nightingale recognised how hospital design could impact revcovery.
Nightingale was considered a leading expert on hospital design
British civil engineer known for his ground-breaking designs.
Often referred to as the first female sociologist.
Nightingale was passionate about reducing rates of infections.
This important and widely-read publication helped to spread Nightingale’s ideas.
Nightingale produced numerous other statistical graphs and charts
Created in 1859 as a charity hospital for the ‘sick poor’.
Ada Lovelace was an English mathematician.