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A photograph of the nursing carriage that accompanied Miss Florence Nightingale through the Crimean War. Born in Italy in 1820, she moved to England with her wealthy family & was educated at home by her father. Although it was not deemed suitable for ladies of Florence’s social standing to become nurses, she believed that it was God’s chosen path for her. She trained in Kaiserswerth, near Dusseldorf and then returned to England to take a post at a Harley Street surgery. Florence Nightingale was sent along with 38 nurses to the Barrack Hospital in Scutari to assist with medical support. As she cared for the troops she gained much respect, she writing letters home on the soldiers’ behalf and fighting to improve the sanitary conditions of the field hospitals. When Florence returned from the Crimea she received a hero’s welcome. She published two books about her opinions on hospital reforms and campaigned for better quality nursing training until her death in August 1910.
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