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Anna Maxwell

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Profession
  
Nurse

Spouse
  
Roger Michell

Role
  
Actress


Name
  
Anna Maxwell

Specialism
  
Nurse training

Siblings
  
Adam Martin

Anna Maxwell imagesradiotimescomnamedimageAnnaMaxwellMart

Born
  
14 March 1851 (
1851-03-14
)

Died
  
2 January 1929(1929-01-02) (aged 77)

Known for
  
Pioneering professional nursing in the United States Establishing the Army Nurse Corps

Institutions
  
New England Hospital Massachusetts General Hospital St. Luke's Hospital, New York Presbyterian Hospital of New York

Notable prizes
  
Medaille de l'Hygiene Publique

Children
  
Nancy Michell, Maggie Michell

Education
  
University of Liverpool, London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, Beverley High School

Movies and TV shows
  
Philomena, Becoming Jane, Bleak House, Alan Partridge: Alpha Pa, North & South

Similar People
  
Roger Michell, Rachael Stirling, Steve Coogan, Julian Jarrold, Kate Buffery

Anna maxwell martin in cabaret 2006


Anna Caroline Maxwell (March 14, 1851 â€“ January 2, 1929), was a nurse who came to be known as "the American Florence Nightingale". Her pioneering activities were crucial to the growth of professional nursing in the United States.

Contents

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Anna maxwell martin interview on expenses pt 1


Early years

Anna Maxwell Anna Maxwell Martin My sad face helps with acting roles

Maxwell was born in Bristol, New York on March 14, 1851. Her father was a Scottish emigrant, clergyman John Eglinton Maxwell, and her mother was an American-born woman of English descent, Diantha Caroline Maxwell. The family moved to Canada for some of Maxwell's childhood, returning in 1874. That year, she began nursing without formal training, as an assistant matron at New England Hospital. She left in 1876 and spent two years in England before enrolling at Boston City Hospital Training School for Nurses. She was attracted there by the renown of Linda Richards, one of America's first nurses, who taught at the school.

Career

Anna Maxwell Anna Maxwell Martin News Photos and Videos

In 1880 Maxwell was hired to start a training school at Montreal General Hospital, however she found it a frustratingly slow experience. She left after six months and travelled to Europe, where she visited a number of hospitals. She returned to America and in November 1881 she was offered the superintendency of the Training School for Nurses at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. In 1889, she moved to New York to be director of nursing at St. Luke's Hospital, and from there became superintendent of nursing at the Presbyterian Hospital of New York from 1892 to 1921. Maxwell was also the first director of the Presbyterian Hospital's nursing school, founded in 1892, which later became the Columbia University School of Nursing.

Wartime activities

Anna Maxwell Anna Maxwell Martin North and South

During the Spanish–American War Maxwell requested permission to take trained nurses to military hospitals to care for casualties. She was sent to a field hospital in Chicamauga, Georgia, where she and her nurses encountered poor sanitation, widespread disease, and a high death rate. Maxwell and her nurses were able to improve the conditions significantly. There was also an outbreak of typhoid fever at a military training camp in the area, and Maxwell led 150 nurses in caring for over 600 cases, as well as cases of malaria and measles. The military was impressed with the nurses' achievements and in 1901, with Maxwell's involvement, the United States Army Nurse Corps was established.

Anna Maxwell Anna Maxwell Martin Televisual feasts

In World War I, she also worked to prepare nurses for active military service, and in 1916 travelled to Europe to visit hospitals at the fronts. France awarded her the Medaille de l'Hygiene Publique (Medal of Honor for Public Health) in recognition of her work. Following the war, Maxwell worked for nurses to be given a rank in the armed forces, which was achieved in 1920.

Other activities

Anna Maxwell Anna Maxwell Martin interview Marie Claire

In addition to her work in education and with the military, Maxwell co-wrote a textbook with Amy E. Pope entitled Practical Nursing. She was also a member of the American Society of Superintendents of Training Schools for Nurses (1893), which later developed into the National League for Nursing, and the Nurses' Associated Alumnae of the United States and Canada (1897), which later became the American Nurses Association. She was also a member of the International Council of Nurses (1899) and the American Red Cross Nursing Service (1899), and was involved in establishing the American Journal of Nursing and the Isabel Hampton Robb Scholarship Fund.

Recognition

Anna Maxwell Anna Maxwell Martin Pictures The Philips British Academy

The first building to open at the new Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center in 1928 was the home for the university's nursing school. It was named the "Anna C. Maxwell Hall" in her honor. The hall was razed in 1984 to make room for a new hospital building, and the university established an endowed professorship at the nursing school in Maxwell's name. Maxwell was one of the first women buried at Arlington National Cemetery. Columbia University awarded her an honorary Master of Arts degree. Due to her military service, establishing the Army Nurse Corps, she was one of the first women buried in Arlington National Cemetery with full military honors.

References

Anna Maxwell Wikipedia