The Unwritten Rules of History

Tag: digital history (Page 4 of 7)

Forgotten Carers: How digital methodology illuminates female nursing in 18th century British Naval Hospitals

Image of the Naval Hospital in Portsmouth

‘Naval Hospital, Haslar, near Portsmouth: view from right. Coloured aquatint with etching by J. Wells, 1799, after J. Hall.’ by J. Revd. Hall. Credit: Wellcome Collection. CC BY

Note from Stephanie: Hello everyone and welcome to the second of our 3-part series, based on a panel presentation given this past spring at the Canadian Historical Association annual conference in Regina, SK! You can read the first paper of the series here. Today’s essay comes to us from Erin Spinney, who will be discussing how the Digital Humanities help tell the stories of nurses who served in eigtheenth-century British naval hospitals. This year’s CHA was the first time I really had an opportunity to learn about Erin’s work, and it is truly fascinating and immersing research. Enjoy!

In the last quarter of the eighteenth century, Plymouth Naval Hospital employed over a thousand different women as nurses. Some like Honor Palmer, spent more than fifteen years of their lives, nursing in the service of the state. These women were part of the everyday fabric of the naval institutions and provided crucial medical care, ensured the cleanliness of hospital wards, and helped to enable a healthy healing environment through ventilation. Unfortunately, these women have been largely forgotten in nursing and medical history, or when they do enter into historical narratives, it is often to contrast the ‘superior’ practices of post-Nightingale nursing in the late-nineteenth century. For instance, American nursing leaders Lavinia Dock and Adelaide Nutting described the seventeenth to the mid-nineteenth century nursing as “the darkest known period in the history of nursing,” when nursing had “sank to an indescribable level of degredation.” (1) This description, intended to bolster the professionalization efforts of the new Nightingale nurses, would continue to frame the historiographical depictions of pre-Nightingale nurses throughout the twentieth century until the present day. (2)

 

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Atlantic Canada Studies Conference – May 4-5, 2018

Panoramic view of the Grand Pré Historic Overlook

Panoramic View of the Grand Pré Historic Overlook, Unesco World Heritage site and famous for being the site where thousands of Acadians were deported by the colonial British Government in Halifax, just a short drive away from Acadia University. Taken by Rachel Bryant.

Welcome back to Unwritten Histories, everyone! Lee is out of the hospital, Andrea and I are no longer sick, and to celebrate, we’re giving you some comprehensive coverage of this year’s Atlantic Canada Studies Conference which took place in the beautiful and historic Wolfville, Nova Scotia. Located just steps away from the Grand-Pré UNESCO World Heritage site, it seemed a very apropos location to be discussing the state of Atlantic Canada studies. Acadia did a great job hosting, and pulled off a fantastic conference.

Before I start my coverage of this spectacular event, a caveat: there were so many great panels, many of them happening concurrently, and it was physically impossible to attend all of them. Therefore, I can only include details of the ones I went to personally (although in a few cases my good friend and University of Saskatchewan PhD Candidate Michelle Desveaux went to other panels to take some notes for me; but even then, we still missed most of the conference due to the impossibility of attending everything). For those of you who wanted to hear more about panels that I did not attend, I apologize. If I could split myself into four people and attend every single concurrent panel I absolutely would have, because everything sounded amazing. I particularly regret missing panels that featured Rachel Bryant, Chantal Richard, Natasha Simon, Nicole O’Byrne, Sarah Spike, and Tina Loo, to name only a few.

 

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