The precursor of the College was the Matron's Aid Society later known as the Trained Midwives Registration Society, set up in London in 1881 by
Louisa Hubbard,
Zepherina Veitch, and some of her colleagues. It aimed to "raise the efficiency and improve the status of midwifery" and to petition parliament for their recognition. They wanted to give mothers and their children the proper care they longed for. Shortly afterwards its name was changed to the Midwives Institute and there followed a period of about twenty years of campaigning before the government was persuaded to regulate the profession.
The Midwives Act was passed in 1902 and after that, it was illegal for any unqualified person in
England or
Wales to act as a midwife. Similar legislation was implemented in
Scotland in 1915 and in
Northern Ireland in 1922. The training of midwives was done by the
Central Midwives Board. Lectures were given and a journal was produced. The fees charged by midwives were low and if a doctor was needed to assist at the birth, further fees were required by him. By 1901 the Institute had established a scheme for providing insurance for midwives who were forced to be in quarantine after attending a case of
puerperal fever. They had to defend themselves at inquests or pay fees to doctors. By 1919,
local authorities were required to pay the doctor's fee and then recoup the sum back from the family. The Institute continued to campaign and in 1936, the Midwives Act was passed. This encouraged training, introduced a diploma for those who passed an examination, and instituted five-yearly refresher courses. The Institute undertook a study into why the maternal death rate was so high. In 1941, it changed its name to the College of Midwives, and in 1947, it was given a
royal charter by
King George VI. This led C. S. B. Wentworth-Stanley, a chairman on the appeal and building committee in the
United Kingdom, to request a new building for the organisation's headquarters. == Mission statement ==