Documents relating to the dismissal of Charlotte Salisbury from the Scutari Barrack Hospital, [18--].

ArchivalResource

Documents relating to the dismissal of Charlotte Salisbury from the Scutari Barrack Hospital, [18--].

Copies of sixteen letters and other documents, written in autograph manuscript in an unidentified hand. Included are copies of documents written by Charlotte Salisbury and by Florence Nightingale.

1 item (ca. 70 p.) ; 33 cm.

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

Nightingale, Florence, 1820-1910

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6v51mm6 (person)

Florence Nightingale (1820-1910), nursing pioneer and reformer, is regarded as the founder of modern nursing. Born in Florence, Italy, she dedicated her life to the care of the sick and war wounded. In 1844, she began to visit hospitals; in 1850, she spent some time with the nursing Sisters of St. Vincent de Paul in Alexandria and a year later studied at the institute for Protestant deaconesses in Kaiserswerth, Germany. In 1854, she organized a unit of 38 nurses for service in the Crimean War. I...

Scutari Barrack Hospital.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6356twb (corporateBody)

Salisbury, Charlotte Y.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w67m4bv2 (person)

BIOGHIST REQUIRED Charlotte Young Salisbury was born in Weston, Massachusetts in 1914. The daughter of prominent Massachusetts politician Benjamin Loring Young, she attended the Winsor School in Boston and the Dobbs School in Dobbs Ferry, New York. Salisbury went on to pursue a modeling career as a “Powers Girl” in the early 1930s. In 1934 she married Allston Boyer, with whom she had her first daughter, Charlotte Boyer Parkinson. Following a divorce five years later, she married her...