• Grow your own collection of elegant flowers treasured by the Victorians – Canterbury Bells, Larkspur and Candytuft; just add water!
  • Brighten your feet with these funky coloured socks. Ideal for microbiologists and medical professionals as the socks are covered with brightly coloured images of bacteria.
  • This postcard shows nursing from Nightingale through to today in six figures.
  • A History of Nursing explores the history of nursing by investigating the earliest records of the caring profession, how it progressed and what established it along the way to becoming the nursing we see today. It starts at the beginning of the story - how, once upon a time, all we had to depend on was Mother Nature. How did nursing go from being knowledge handed down through ancient scripts, folklore and sometimes by accident, to the degree-level, accountable practice of modern times? And why do nurses not wear hats anymore? A History of Nursing answers all these questions and more.
  • Hugely popular owl finger puppet made from soft and curly detailed fur and two beaded eyes. Small pieces of Velcro on the wings allow you to open and close them for added effects. This puppet works really well to tell tales and sits nicely by itself when not in use.
  • The Florence Nightingale Museum Book of Honour Donation
  • Crimea

    £12.99
    Orlando Figes’ vivid book reinterprets this extraordinary conflict. Bringing to life ordinary soldiers in snow-filled trenches, surgeons on the battlefield and the haunted, fanatical figure of Tsar Nicholas himself, Crimea tells the human story of a tragic war.
  • How do you cultivate braver, more daring leaders, and how do you embed the value of courage in your culture? Author Brene Brown (Daring Greatly; Rising Strong; Braving the Wilderness) shows that leadership is not about titles, status or power. Leaders are those who take responsibility for developing the potential in people and ideas.
  • A humorous mug designed for hard working nurses, decorated with the quote Would you like to speak to the Doctor in Charge, or the Nurse who Knows what’s going on?
  • Necklace with a pendant in the shape of a Turkish Fanoos lamp, just like Florence would have used, earning her the nickname 'The Lady with the Lamp'.  
  • Fun rubber duck in the shape of our favourite nurse, complete with fanoos!
  • Born into a wealthy family, Florence Nightingale could have lived a life of leisure and luxury. Instead, she longed to be a nurse. In the 1830s that was the last thing a rich girl could do - but Florence was no ordinary girl.  
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