A black student at a “whites-only” Woolworth's lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina; a Freedom Rider in Jackson, Mississippi; a participant in the March on Washington; a community organizer for the Freedom Summer; two marchers from Selma to Montgomery—one a black nun, the other a white activist murdered by the Ku Klux Klan. What these women have in common—in addition to being dedicated civil rights activists—is that they were nurses. One hundred years after slavery African Americans in the South were still subject to the Jim Crow laws that banned them from using public, tax-supported, “whites-only” facilities—including schools, libraries, parks, and hospitals. In the 1950s and 1960s, as increasing numbers of Americans became aware of...
A continuing series of articles for the Tar Heel Nurse examining the North Carolina Nurses Associati...
When NCNA formed in 1902, membership privileges were extended only to white nurses. Although North C...
The converging crises of COVID-19 and racist state violence in 2020 shifted public discourse about m...
The mid-twentieth century marked a critical turning point in the history of race and American nursin...
The mid-twentieth century marked a critical turning point in the history of race and American nursin...
More than a decade before the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as an African American teenager from Baltimo...
Charlotte Rhone, a pioneering African American nurse born in Craven County, North Carolina, at the e...
This article traces the personal history of four women in joumey to enter the nursing profession dur...
Charlotte Rhone, a pioneering African American nurse born in Craven County, North Carolina, at the e...
This Article introduces a category of women who, until now, have been omitted from the scholarly lit...
As part of the Board of Directors' new strategic priority, Relentless Inclusion, the North Carolina ...
The Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees women the right to vote. Its ratificati...
This article traces the beginning of African Americans in the nursing profession in the state of Nor...
Black women have had a long history of unrecognized community activism. This includes involvement in...
The names and accomplishment of Ella King Newsome, Phoebe Yates Pember, and Kate Cummings are famili...
A continuing series of articles for the Tar Heel Nurse examining the North Carolina Nurses Associati...
When NCNA formed in 1902, membership privileges were extended only to white nurses. Although North C...
The converging crises of COVID-19 and racist state violence in 2020 shifted public discourse about m...
The mid-twentieth century marked a critical turning point in the history of race and American nursin...
The mid-twentieth century marked a critical turning point in the history of race and American nursin...
More than a decade before the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as an African American teenager from Baltimo...
Charlotte Rhone, a pioneering African American nurse born in Craven County, North Carolina, at the e...
This article traces the personal history of four women in joumey to enter the nursing profession dur...
Charlotte Rhone, a pioneering African American nurse born in Craven County, North Carolina, at the e...
This Article introduces a category of women who, until now, have been omitted from the scholarly lit...
As part of the Board of Directors' new strategic priority, Relentless Inclusion, the North Carolina ...
The Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees women the right to vote. Its ratificati...
This article traces the beginning of African Americans in the nursing profession in the state of Nor...
Black women have had a long history of unrecognized community activism. This includes involvement in...
The names and accomplishment of Ella King Newsome, Phoebe Yates Pember, and Kate Cummings are famili...
A continuing series of articles for the Tar Heel Nurse examining the North Carolina Nurses Associati...
When NCNA formed in 1902, membership privileges were extended only to white nurses. Although North C...
The converging crises of COVID-19 and racist state violence in 2020 shifted public discourse about m...