In February 1900, Father John P. Connelly, the Roman Catholic parish priest of Achill Island, County Mayo, wrote to the Queen Victoria’s Jubilee Institute for Nurses (QNI) in Dublin, pleading for funds to retain the island’s Jubilee nurse. Emotively, he claimed that the year before she arrived, there had been 24 maternal deaths and “scarcely any since she came here.”ACCEPTEDpeer-reviewe
baptized a Protestant. Being a frail baby, she was taken to Nurse Mary Rorke at Eason's Hill to...
A report of the District Nursing Service, an extension of the work of the Health Committee of the Ba...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Catholicism was a defining element of Irish national ident...
peer-reviewedIn February 1900, Father John P. Connelly, the Roman Catholic parish priest of Achill ...
peer-reviewedIn a country where traditional or ethno-medical practices prevailed well into the twen...
peer-reviewedThis chapter outlines the attempts the Lady Dudley scheme made in tandem with the Cong...
In the years following Ireland's political independence in 1922 the popularity of its missionary mov...
Abstract Much has been written about the early years of nursing and the emergence of nursing as a...
This lively book tells the untold story of the crucial work carried out by the Irish Emigrant Chapla...
This Thesis examines the development of trained district nursing in rural\ud Gloucestershire from th...
Grosse-Île, Canada's main quarantine station from 1832 to 1937, was a required stopover for immigra...
Owen's visit to Ireland represented an important effort to attract government support for his villag...
This article examines the lives of Irish-born women religious around the world in the period 1840–19...
The nursing of the ‘rebels’ and the role of nurses in the Easter Rising of 1916 have received little...
Until now a hidden topic, this study creates a representation of Irish migrant nurses in Britain dur...
baptized a Protestant. Being a frail baby, she was taken to Nurse Mary Rorke at Eason's Hill to...
A report of the District Nursing Service, an extension of the work of the Health Committee of the Ba...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Catholicism was a defining element of Irish national ident...
peer-reviewedIn February 1900, Father John P. Connelly, the Roman Catholic parish priest of Achill ...
peer-reviewedIn a country where traditional or ethno-medical practices prevailed well into the twen...
peer-reviewedThis chapter outlines the attempts the Lady Dudley scheme made in tandem with the Cong...
In the years following Ireland's political independence in 1922 the popularity of its missionary mov...
Abstract Much has been written about the early years of nursing and the emergence of nursing as a...
This lively book tells the untold story of the crucial work carried out by the Irish Emigrant Chapla...
This Thesis examines the development of trained district nursing in rural\ud Gloucestershire from th...
Grosse-Île, Canada's main quarantine station from 1832 to 1937, was a required stopover for immigra...
Owen's visit to Ireland represented an important effort to attract government support for his villag...
This article examines the lives of Irish-born women religious around the world in the period 1840–19...
The nursing of the ‘rebels’ and the role of nurses in the Easter Rising of 1916 have received little...
Until now a hidden topic, this study creates a representation of Irish migrant nurses in Britain dur...
baptized a Protestant. Being a frail baby, she was taken to Nurse Mary Rorke at Eason's Hill to...
A report of the District Nursing Service, an extension of the work of the Health Committee of the Ba...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Catholicism was a defining element of Irish national ident...