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Louisa Lee Schuyler

Louisa Lee Schuyler was an early American leader in charitable work, particularly noted for founding the first nursing school in the United States.

Charitable work
During the Civil War, at the relatively young age of 24, Schuyler was appointed as the corresponding secretary in the Woman's Central Association of Relief (WCAR) in New York City. The mission of WCAR was to coordinate the efforts of the volunteers on the home front, including distribution of millions of dollars of supplies, and providing training materials. Schuyler served as one of its early presidents. Joseph Hodges Choate and George Folger Canfield were subsequent presidents. In 1873, through the SCAA, she helped establish the first training school for nurses in the United States, Bellevue Training School of Nursing, in connection with Bellevue Hospital. She also worked on projects to address tuberculosis and blindness. In 1907 she was appointed one of the original trustees of the Russell Sage Foundation, founded by Margaret Olivia Slocum Sage. == Recognition ==
Recognition
In recognition of her 40 years of activity in charitable work, she received in 1915 the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from Columbia University, where former SCAA president Canfield was a professor of law. In 2000, the State Charities Aid Association was renamed the Schuyler Center for Analysis and Advocacy in her honor. == Family and personal life ==
Family and personal life
Schuyler was the great-great-granddaughter of Gen. Philip Schuyler and the great-granddaughter of Alexander Hamilton, and the granddaughter of James Alexander Hamilton. Schuyler never married, living with her sister Georgina for most of her adult life. She died shortly before her 89th birthday. ==References==
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