Jacqueline Braithwaite's history-focused print is on display at the SS Great Britain's Dockyard Museum in Bristol.
They discuss Nightingale's pioneering role in nursing, her complex personal journey, and the challenges she faced during the Crimean War. The hosts delve into her groundbreaking use of statistics ...
The lamp represents nursing traditions of selfless work and dedication. The significance goes back to Florence Nightingale’s ...
In 1851, against her family’s wishes, she went to Germany to study as a nurse. In 1854, when war broke out against Russia, she went to Crimea to care for wounded soldiers. Nightingale worked at ...
Florence and a team of nurses made the long journey from the UK to help care for the wounded soldiers who were fighting in a place called Crimea. Miriam: When she arrived at the Army Hospital ...
Last week the first ever public statue of a black woman anywhere in Britain was unveiled. Crimean nurse Mary Seacole, sculpted in bronze, now stands in the grounds of St Thomas’s hospital in London — ...