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Description
Mrs. Flynn shares her historical perspective of the nursing sisters and how they were recognized in army life.
Transcription
We are very proud of our military history because it started in 1885 and the grey nuns in Saskatchewan at the time of the Riel rebellion were the only ones going out in the field and looking after the wounded, and they were overwhelmed so they asked for volunteers and so some, I suppose at that time maybe ordinary nurses, I don’t know, some came up from Toronto, about seven came from Toronto and they joined the grey nuns in going out to get the wounded and looking after the wounded and the OC at that time was so impressed with these nurses looking after the wounded that he incorporated them into, what will I say, army life, and that was the first recognition of nursing sisters shall I say; going back Florence Nightingale really was the first military nurse like that but still this is a Canadian and because they had started with the grey nuns there were sister, nursing sister attached itself to us and also, at that time, the English nurses were quite, called sister too. So we just maintained that until this most recent war when of course the males started into the nursing service and they’re now known as nursing officers and so nursing sisters when you hear that name belongs to the old, to the old girls.
Catégories
Recognition of Nursing Sisters
Médium
Video
Propriétaire
Veterans Affairs Canada
Guerre ou mission
Second World War
Emplacement géographique
Canada
Personne interviewée
Pauline Flynn
Branche
Army
Unité ou navire
Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps
Military Rank
Lieutenant
Occupation
Nursing Sister
Durée
1:51