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Mary Adelaide Nutting

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Me and my parter have officially chosen Mary Adelaide Nutting, as her page is extremely scarce, and is lacking extremely essential aspects of her life/contributions to the nursing world.

Sources/Bibliography

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http://www.nursingworld.org/MaryAdelaideNutting

http://msa.maryland.gov/msa/educ/exhibits/womenshall/html/nutting.html

http://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc3500/sc3520/013500/013593/html/13593bio.html

http://www.nurses.info/personalities_adelaide_nutting.htm

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Mary-Adelaide-Nutting

http://www.workingnurse.com/articles/Mary-Adelaide-Nutting-Rock-Star-of-Nursing

Outline

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  • Lead Section
    • This articles lead section (like the whole article) is very scarce, and simply states what she was (an educator, administrator, and author). It says nothing about her childhood or early life. It tells nothing about how she got into nursing, or where she got her nursing education. It lacks any detail on her professional nursing career, and where/when she held positions in nursing. It lacks any contributions she made in literature, and any nursing education contributions she made. It lacks positions she held in organizations, and it lacks any awards she was awarded in her field. Finally, it lacks anyone of interest whom she came into contact with within her field, and it lacks her later life towards the end and after the bulk of her nursing career.
  • Early Life/Family
    • Place of birth, parents, siblings, childhood, what she was like in her young years up to a teen
  • Education
    • The current section simply says she attended the Johns Hopkins nursing school
      • Where did she go to highschool, college, nursing school. What got her interested in the field of nursing
  • Career
    • The first section simply states she worked at hopkins, then went to teachers college.
      • What did she do after nursing school. Where did she work and what positions did she hold
  • Contributions
    • What works did she write on nursing. How did she reform nursing education.
  • Organizations
    • What groups was she a part of apart from her job. Did she found them? What contributions did they make?
  • Awards/Accolades
    • Did she win any awards or get noticed specifically for anything? What did people say about her?
  • Later Life
    • What did she do towards the end of her nursing career? Did she retire? Did she move or get married? Children?
  • Death
    • Where and how did she die? What will she be remembered for? What was her legacy?

Lead Section

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Mary Adelaide Nutting (November 1, 1858 - October 3, 1948) was an American educator, administrator, and author in the field of Nursing. She was born in Quebec, Canada to Vespaisan and Harriet Sophia Resley. When Nutting was a young girl, her family moved to Maryland, where she would live, work, and attend school for seventeen years. In 1889 she became part of the first ever class at the Johns Hopkins school of nursing. She would later graduate in 1891, and stay on to work at the university. She eventually became head nurse, assistant superintendent nurse, and finally principal of the training school for nurses at Johns Hopkins. As president of the nursing school, Nutting made many serious contributions towards the ideology of nursing education, specifically advocating for university education for nurses. She also published many works on nursing and nursing education, including Sound Economic Basis for Nursing and the first two volumes of History for Nursing. Apart from literature contributions, Nutting was apart of various nursing organizations, such as the State Association of Graduate Nurses. After spending many years at Hopkins, Nutting left to take the chairmanship of the Nursing Education Department at Teachers College, Columbia University (this made her the first nurse appointed to university professorship). Nutting remained in New York after her retirement, and received many awards and accolades for her nursing contributions. On October 3, 1948, Nutting died in White Plains, NY at the age of 89 (she had been suffering from a long illness). Since her death Nutting has not been forgotten, as she was inducted into the American Nurses Hall of Fame, and the Maryland Women's Hall of Fame.

Early Life/Family

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Nutting was born to caring parents in Quebec, Canada. She was a quick-witted, determined young girl, even deciding as a child, that she would never marry. She She grew up in Montreal and later Quebec, eventually relocating to Baltimore, where she would reside for seventeen years. It was in Baltimore that she was exposed to the ever famous Johns Hopkins University/Hospital.

Education

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While growing up, Nutting's parents had her enrolled in private school, where she became very interested with the arts and music. She even went on to teach music at the Cathedral School for Girls in St. John's Newfoundland. Upon her relocation to Baltimore, MD, Nutting decided to take a new path in life, and enroll in nursing school. She was one of seventeen females, who made up the inaugural class of the Johns Hopkins Training School for Nursing. Nutting enrolled in 1889, and three short years later was a member of the first graduating class of the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing. Upon graduation, she decided to stay on at Johns Hopkins, slowly climbing the ranks of nursing.

Career

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**note to self, create reference section, and cite all factual information**