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Florence Nightingale’s greatest achievement was to raise
nursing to the level of a respectable profession for women.
In November 1856, Miss Nightingale took an hotel
room in London which became the centre for the campaign for a Royal
Commission to investigate the health of the British Army. When Sidney
Herbert was appointed chairman, she continued as a driving force behind
the scenes.
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Florence Nightingale
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In 1860, with the public subscriptions of the
Nightingale Fund, she established the Nightingale Training School for
nurses at St Thomas’ Hospital. The probationer nurses received a
year’s training which included some lectures but was mainly practical
ward work under the supervision of the ward sister. ‘Miss
Nightingale’, as she was always called by the nurses, scrutinised the
probationers’ ward diaries and reports.
In 1861, she wrote Notes on Nursing for the
Labouring Classes, a book that gave advice to ordinary working
class people, especially rural poor cottagers, to teach ‘the art of
health, which every mother, girl, mistress, teacher, child’s nurse,
every woman ought practically to learn.’
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At the time of the 1861 census she was living at the
Burlington hotel, 30, Old Burlington street, Westminster, London. With
that information in hand, I set out to look for her census record in the
London 1861 Census CD set from British
Data Archive.
I decided to have a look at the Street Index on CD 20, to see if I
could find Old Burlington street. I searched through the Wesminster
district's street index for Burlington and found Old Burlington street
with the reference Piece 64, folios 107 to 111.
The 1861 London CD set booklet said this piece was on CD 4, so
loading this I clicked on the bookmark 110 and paged down to check to
folio 111b, 30 Old Burlington street was on folio 110b. My search had
finally ended; Florence Nightingale's entry was there in black and
white:
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