Page:A short history of nursing - Lavinia L Dock (1920).djvu/250

234 234 A Short History of Nursing has gathered around her. Among those who have, at one time or another, been closely associated with the work of the department are Ella Phillips Cran- dall, Anne Strong, Florence Johnson, and Lillian Hudson in Public Health Nursing; Annie Good- rich and PermeHa Doty in Training School Ad- ministration, and Isabel Stewart in Teaching. Dr. C. E. A. Winslow, Dr. Haven Emerson, Dr. Josephine Baker, and Dr. Josephine Kenyon have also been closely connected with the department as lecturers for a number of years. There were, in 1 91 9, on the staff, — three professors, three in- structors, and a number of lecturers and assistants. The first preparatory course was started in 1893, by Mrs. Strong in Glasgow, Scotland, in connec- Development tion with the Glasgow infirmary. The tornouJses ^^^^ents took a brief course of theoreti- for nurses in cal instruction in St. Mungo's College, technkaf"^ ^^^^^ which they began their practical schools work at the hospital. As we have noted before, the preparatory course was introduced first in America in 1901 in the Johns Hopkins' hospital, the theoretical work being given in the hospital itself. A number of schools adopted this plan, but many of them found it difficult to supply the scientific courses required. In 1903, arrangements were made with two