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Ian Norman •
Sir Jonathan Asbridge, first president of the UK's
Nursing and Midwifery Council and director of Nursing NHS London •
Kate Waller Barrett, prominent Virginia physician, humanitarian, philanthropist, sociologist and social reformer, led the
National Florence Crittenton Mission, which she founded in 1895. •
Alice Fisher, a nursing pioneer in the US at the
Philadelphia General Hospital •
Elaine Hills-Young, leading nurse and midwife including with the Red Cross in Sudan •
June Jolly, children's nurse and social worker who pioneered care in children's hospitals •
Agnes Jones, became the first trained nursing superintendent of Liverpool Workhouse Infirmary •
Florence Sarah Lees, one of the pioneers of
district nursing •
Alicia LLoyd Still, matron of St Thomas Hospital, superintendent of the Nightingale school 1913-1937, and founding member of the
Royal College of Nursing • Baronness
Sophie Mannerheim, initially trained as a probationer, eventually becoming a matron and step up a Helsinki training school and later becoming president of the
International Council of Nurses •
Dame Sarah Mullaly, she was the youngest ever
Chief Nursing Officer, before becoming the first female
Archbishop of Canterbury undertool clinicial placements here during her training, and also worked here as a staff nurse. •
Ian Norman, Professor and Dean of the Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery at
King's College London and Fellow of the
Royal College of Nursing and
American Academy of Nursing •
Lucy Osburn, regarded as the founder of modern nursing in Australia •
Ella Pirrie, first head nurse of the
Belfast City Hospital • Chief
Kofoworola Abeni Pratt, first
black nurse in the NHS and subsequently
chief nursing officer of
Nigeria. •
Anne Marie Rafferty, Professor and former Dean of the Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwifery at
King's College London and Fellow of the
Royal College of Nursing •
Emmy Rappe, a Swedish nurse who founded the Swedish Nursing Association •
Linda Richards, first professionally trained American nurse and established nursing training programs in US and Japan • Dame
Cecily Saunders, nurse, physician and social worker who established the first modern hospice having instituted
St Christopher's Hospice - which kick-started the hospice movement. Saunders was a pioneer of palliative care •
Isla Stewart, a nurse who became the matron of
St Bartholomew's Hospital and founded the Royal British Nurses Association • Dame
Alicia Lloyd Still, matron and superintendent of St. Thomas's Hospital 1913-1937, founding member of the College of Nursing (later the
Royal College of Nursing), one of the leaders of the campaign for state registration of nurses in the UK, appointed then elected to the
General Nursing Council (1920-1937), helped found the
Florence Nightingale Museum. •
Henny Tscherning, a Danish nurse who was president of the
Danish Nurses' Organization •
Theodora Turner, matron and nurse superintendent of St Thomas' Hospital (especially during its reconstruction period after the German bombing) as well as former president of
Royal College of Nursing •
Sarah Elizabeth Wardroper, a matron of
St Thomas' Hospital at the time Nightingale instituted the school, she became the school's first superintendent ==References==