Banks was the first head nurse at the Hospital and Training School for Nurses in Charleston, South Carolina, located at 135 Cannon Street. This hospital was later renamed to McClennan-Banks Memorial Hospital. She became the Superintendent of Nurses, a position she held for 32 years. She stressed the need for funds to create hospitals to offer practical training for Black nurses who were denied assignments to rounds in most hospitals because of segregation. Throughout her career she focused on seeking more
equitable health care for African Americans by deeply caring while only charging them the cost of board and medicine. Additionally, Banks wrote an article in 1899 regarding the issues African-American nurses faced for the Hampton Training School for Nurses and Dixie Hospital. At this time, segregation affected where African-American nurses were able to work. Banks stressed the need for funding and donations at various hospitals to provide practical training for African-American nurses. Meanwhile, Banks also privately worked as a visiting public-health nurse for the
Ladies Benevolent Society for Charleston starting in 1898. She served this society for twenty-four years and as a collector interacting with Black policyholders for the
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. == Legacy ==