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*There is a book called A Brief History of Nursing in India and Pakistan by Alice WILKINSON, 1958  [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6417940&referer=brief_results Seach for a Library] which has this book. The British Library also has this book.
==Civil Nursing==


*[http://www.carefoundation.org.in/Clc_3.htm Nursing in India] by Shubhada Sakurikar includes the following information:
General information on nursing in India can be found in the book ''A Brief History of Nursing in India and Pakistan'' by Alice Wilkinson (1958).<sup>[[Nurse#Notes|1]] </sup> Wilkinson was associated with nursing in India for more than forty years and in 1908 was the first trained British nurse to join St Stephens Hospital, [[Delhi]]. Alongside a history of the development of the profession from its earliest times, she describes nursing specialities, including leprosy and tuberculosis work.


For many years nursing training was the preserve of Europeans and Anglo-Indians. The Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy (JJ) Hospital [Bombay] was the first to train nurses in western India. The first Indian lady to come forward for nursing training was Bai Kashibai Ganpat in 1891 in Bombay. In the years that followed, nursing schools were established all over the country in collaboration with government, state and private hospitals.
''A History of Nursing in the British Empire'' by Sarah A. Southall Tooley (published 1906) has a section on India, pages 339-349.<sup>[[Nurse#Notes|2]] </sup> Interesting information in the book:
:*It is stated that the [[Calcutta]] Hospital Nurses Institution was founded in 1859 “with which is associated the Lady Canning Home, Calcutta, institutions doing valuable work today in supplying nurses to hospitals and in the training of skilled private staff."
:*Nurse training at the General Hospital, [[Madras]] and the Cama Hospital, [[Bombay]] was also mentioned. The latter is a hospital for women and children. It subsequently became affiliated with the Grant Medical College in 1923 and part of the Sir J.J. Hospital Group.
:*“The nursing of Europeans in India has been met to some extent in the large towns by the Clewer, Wantage and All Saints Sisterhoods and kindred private institutions." (Refer [[Nurse#Religious Orders|Religious Orders]] below).


The ''Association of Nursing Superintendents'' was founded in 1905 at Lucknow. The organization was composed of nine European nurses holding administrative posts in hospitals. At the 1908 Annual Conference held in Bombay, a decision was taken to establish the ''Trained Nurses’ Association''. This Association was inaugurated in 1909. The ''Nursing Journal of India'' (Nurs J India) began publishing in 1912. The ''Association of Nursing Superintendents'' and the ''Trained Nurses’ Association'' were amalgamated in 1922 and renamed ''The Trained Nurses’ Association of India'' (TNAI).
===Training and Hospital Nursing===
This article [http://shm.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/18/3/357 abstract] refers to the training of midwives in Madras in a Government lying-in [obstetrics] hospital from the 1840's
 
For many years nursing training was the preserve of Europeans and [[Anglo Indian|Anglo-Indians]]. The Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy (JJ) Hospital ([[Bombay]]) was the first to train nurses in western India. The first Indian lady to come forward for nursing training was Bai Kashibai Ganpat in 1891 in Bombay, implying that European and Eurasians were training prior to this date. In the years that followed, nursing schools were established all over the country in collaboration with government, state and private hospitals. <ref> [http://archive.today/0RAYS ''Nursing in India'' by Shubhada Sakurikar]</ref>
 
St Stephens Hospital, Delhi started a training School for nurses under Alice Wilkinson — the first trained British nurse who joined the hospital in 1908. Wilkinson became the hospital's nursing superintendent and is credited with raising the standard of nursing not only in St Stephen's but in the rest of India as well. She founded the Trained Nurses’ Association of India and worked as its secretary until 1948.  <ref> [http://www.ststephenshospital.org/about.php St Stephen's Hospital, Delhi] </ref>
 
===Associations===
The Association of Nursing Superintendents was founded in 1905 at [[Lucknow]]. The organization was composed of nine European nurses holding administrative posts in hospitals. At the 1908 Annual Conference held in Bombay, a decision was taken to establish the Trained Nurses’ Association. This Association was inaugurated in 1909.  The Association of Nursing Superintendents and the Trained Nurses’ Association were amalgamated in 1922 and renamed The Trained Nurses’ Association of India (TNAI).
 
The Up-Country Nursing Association for Europeans In India, founded in 1892 in the UK, sent trained nurses to India for employment under local committees nursing sick Europeans in up-country districts. Lady Minto’s Nursing Association, established 1906 in the UK, sent nurses to India, its chief object being to supply trained female nurses and midwives to patients requiring attendance either in their private residences or in public or private hospitals in any part of the Indian Empire. The former organisation later amalgamated with the latter.
 
The Royal College of Nursing Archives (Edinburgh) (see [[Nurse#Other_Libraries_and_Archives|Other Libraries and Archives]]) holds the record "Lady Minto's Indian Nursing Association" (catalogue reference '''C/123'''). This ''British Journal of Nursing'' article gives [http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME074-1926/page118-volume74-june1926.pdf staff numbers in 1926].  Emma Wilson was working in India with the Lady Minto’s Indian Nursing Association from the 1920’s? until 1947. She was Chief Lady Superintendent from 1938 to 1947. Wilson wrote ''Gone With the Raj'', published 1974.<sup>[[Nurse#Notes|3]] </sup>
 
The Medical Missionary Association of India was established in 1905. In 1925 there was a name change to the Christian Medical Association of India
 
===Journals===
The ''Nursing Journal of India'' (Nurs J India) began publishing in 1912. It would be expected there would be mention of many individual nurses in the Journals.  The [[British Library]] has the ''Nursing Journal of India'' from December 1926 (with a few scattered editions prior to this) to February 1939 and Cambridge University Library has an incomplete holding from 1935 to 1989. The Royal College of Nursing Archives in Edinburgh (refer [[Nurse#Other Libraries and Archives|section]] below) believes they have early issues of this Journal (or they can obtain them) but they are not in the computerised catalogue at present.
 
Historical Nursing Journals is an online  searchable database of PDF images showing  British journal pages from the [https://www.rcn.org.uk/library  Royal College of Nursing Library], then select Archives/Family history/Historical nursing journals or direct link [https://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk  Search] ''The Nursing Record'' / ''The British Journal of Nursing'' 1888-1956 image database.  There are many mentions of India in these Journals.  Examples include:
:* [http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME047-1911/page168-volume47-26thaugust1911.pdf "Nursing in Calcutta Hospitals"] (1911)
:* [http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME048-1912/page437-volume48-01stjune1912.pdf "re report of Calcutta Hospitals"] (1912)
:* [http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME047-1911/page169-volume47-26thaugust1911.pdf JJ Hospital, Bombay] (1911)
Also see [[Nurse#Historical books online|Historical books online. below]]
 
===Nurse Registration===
====England====
In England, legislation was passed in 1919 which became effective from 1921.  [[The National Archives]] has Registers of Nurses from 1921 in the series '''DT 10'''. This [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/displaycataloguedetails.asp?CATID=4906&CATLN=3&FullDetails=True link] gives some details about records originating from the General Nursing Council for England and Wales. It seems likely that some Indian trained nurses were also registered in England, as there is an associated series [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/displaycataloguedetails.asp?CATID=4914&CATLN=3&accessmethod=5'''DT 18'''] General Nursing Council for England and Wales: Registrar: Correspondence and Papers, Overseas, which has the following catalogue entries:
*'''DT 18/72''' West Bengal; (India) general 1937 June 7-1948 July 28
*'''DT 18/76''' India Office, London 1924 Mar 25-1941 Dec 22
*'''DT 18/77''' Nursing Council (In Sub series Bengal) 1921 Jan 18-1947 Oct 18
*'''DT 18/101''' General Hospital, Rangoon 1926 Oct 11-1935 July 12
*'''DT 18/141''' Trained Nurses Association 1923 Mar 15-1958 July 24
*'''DT 18/146''' Presidency General Hospital, Calcutta 1923 July 11-1932 June 21
 
The British Library has a catalogue entry: Nurses: registration under the Nurses Registration Act 1919 of Nurses on the Register of the State Medical Faculty of Bengal [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/records.aspx?cat=059-iorle_2-1&cid=1-1-3-641#1-1-3-641 '''IOR/L/E/7/1167, File 4082''']  21 Aug 1923-13 Oct 1932. This [http://smfwb.in/history.html link] gives details of the State Medical Faculty of Bengal.
 
====India====
It appears that registration of nurses in India commenced on a Provincial basis, first in Madras in 1928  and in Burma from 1922. This RCN link is from [http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME081-1933/page286-volume81-october1933.pdf October 1933] and indicates that the UK and Madras had reciprocal registration.
 
The [[British Library]] has two registers of nurses and midwives in [[Madras]]:
*[http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/records.aspx?cat=059-iorv_9-2&cid=1-1-31-8#1-1-31-8 '''IOR/V/25/851/8'''] (1940)
*[http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/records.aspx?cat=059-iorv_9-2&cid=1-1-31-9#1-1-31-9 '''IOR/V/25/851/9'''] (1946)
 
It has the following catalogue entries which indicate some of the particular Acts:
*Medical: General questions - Bengal Nurses Act X of 1934 '''IOR/L/E/9/617''' Collection 100/12, Aug 1933-Oct 1934
*Medical: General questions - Punjab Nurses Registration Act 1932 with Amending Acts '''IOR/L/E/9/627''' Collection 100/22, May 1932-Feb 1937
*Medical: General questions - Central Provinces Nurses Regulation Act 1936 '''IOR/L/E/9/630''' Collection 100/24, Dec 1935-Jan 1937
*Medical: General questions - Bihar and Orissa Nurses Registration Act 1935 with Amendments '''IOR/L/E/9/637''' Collection 100/31, Aug 1934-May 1947
*Medical: General questions - Nurses, Midwives and Health Visitors Registration Act 1935 '''IOR/L/E/9/638''' Collection 100/32, Mar 1935-Jun 1935
*Medical: General questions - Orissa Nurses and Midwives Registration Act 1938 '''IOR/L/E/9/641''' Collection 100/35, Aug 1938-Oct 1938
*Medical: General questions - Sind Nurses, Midwives, Health Visitors and Dais Registration Act 1939 '''IOR/L/E/9/645''' Collection 100/39, May 1939-Jun 1945
*Medical: General questions - North West Frontier Province Midwives Act 1939 '''IOR/L/E/9/646''' Collection 100/40, Jun 1939-Jul 1942
*Burma Nurses and Midwives Act 1922 '''IOR/L/E/7/1156''' File 1869, 5 Apr 1922-29 Mar 1928
*As to the registration of nurses and midwives in Madras: enactment of legislation '''IOR/L/E/7/1350''' File 2905, 12 Jul 1924-13 Sep 1935.
 
===Religious Orders===
*The [http://www.thamesweb.co.uk/windsor/windsor1999/csjb01.html Clewer Sisters] were Sisters from the Anglican Community of St John the Baptist from Clewer (near Windsor in England) who came to Calcutta in 1881. They were involved, at various times, with nursing at the Calcutta General Hospital, Medical College Hospital, and the Eden Hospital (a maternity hospital) and also with nurse training through the Calcutta Hospital Nurses Institution, which was based at the Lady Canning Home. Scroll to the end of this [http://anglicanhistory.org/england/ttcarter/life/05.html link] for brief details of their work in India.
 
*''All Saints Sisters of the Poor'' indicates this order was in India from 1878. <ref>[https://books.google.com.au/books?id=XNS_KBCil2AC&pg=PA15 page 15 footnote] ''All Saints Sisters of the Poor: an Anglican Sisterhood in the Nineteenth Century'' by Susan Mumm,  (published 2001)  Google Books</ref> All Saints Sisters were at the J.J. Hospital, Bombay from 1880 and at St George’s Hospital Bombay from 1885 until 1902 <ref> ''Western medicine and public health in colonial Bombay, 1845-1895'' by Mridula Ramanna 2002</ref>
 
*The Wantage Sisters ([http://www.csmv.co.uk/WantageOverseas.htm Community of St Mary the Virgin],Wantage, Oxfordshire), an Anglican Order, were in [[Bombay]] and [[Poona]] from 1874.<ref>''A History of Christianity (Volume VI) the Great Century in Northern Africa and Asia 1800-1914''</ref> The abbreviation Sr C S M V was used.
 
==Military Nurses in India==
Female nursing was introduced in army hospitals in [[Madras]] in the late 1860’s, well before Calcutta. <ref> Page 73 ''Florence Nightingale and the Health of the Raj'' by Jharna Gourlay (2003) (page no longer available online)</ref> 
 
The Indian Nursing Service for the [[British Army]] in India was founded in 1888, when Miss Catharine Loch and five sisters went to [[Rawalpindi]] and Miss Oxley and three sisters went to [[Bangalore]]. Nurses were recruited in England. (Brief details of the conditions.<ref>''Angels and Citizens: British Women as Military Nurses, 1854-1914'' by Anne Summers (1988),  page 114, gives brief details of the conditions (page no longer available online)</ref>).  The service became known as Queen Alexandra's Military Nursing Service for India in 1903, and in 1926 was amalgamated with Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service.
<br>The Nursing Service for Indian Troops Hospitals was formed in  1926 (Later renamed the Indian Military Nursing Service). This was a permanent nursing service. In the prior years from 1916 the Indian Government had employed many nurses on six months contract.<ref>royalredcross [Norman]. [https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/274001-qamnsi-nurses/?do=findComment&comment=2788124 QAMNSI Nurses] ''Great War Forum'' 31 July 2019. Retrieved 1 August 2019.</ref>
 
*[http://www.scarletfinders.co.uk/8.html The Military Nursing Services] (scarletfinders.co.uk)  Select 'British Military Nurses' and scroll down to Queen Alexandra's Military Nursing Service for India.
*[http://www.qaranc.co.uk/queen-alexandras-imperial-military-nursing-service-for-india.php  Queen Alexandra's Military Nursing Service for India] QARANC  [(Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps)]. 
*[http://www.scarletfinders.co.uk/18.html  Record of Work in France of Queen Alexandra’s Military Nursing Service For India] during the First World War. scarletfinders.co.uk.
 
The work of Australian Army nurses in India in the [[First World War]]:
*[https://www.awm.gov.au/blog/2014/10/28/nursing-british-raj/ "Nursing for the British Raj"] by Ashleigh Wadman  28 October 2014 Australian War Memorial website. Suggested further reading includes ''Guns and Brooches: Australian Army Nursing from the Boer War to the Gulf War'' by Jan Bassett 1997 which  is stated elsewhere<ref> kjharris. [https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/238575-online-articles-aans-australian-nurses-in-india/?do=findComment&comment=2424827 Online articles: AANS (Australian nurses) in India] ''Great War Forum'' 19 July 2016. Retrieved 15 September 2018.</ref> to provide “the best most accurate info on Australians nursing in India”.
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20160323003112/https://www.awm.gov.au/journal/j36/nurses/ "Reading between unwritten lines: Australian Army nurses in India, 1916-19"] by Ruth Rae.  Australian War Memorial website, archived webpage. Describes the 34th Welsh General Hospital (34 WGH) at [[Deolali]].
*[http://emhs.org.au/person/brooks/constance_jessie  Constance Jessie Brooks] was one of over 500 members of the AANS [Australian Army Nursing Service] who served in India during the First World War although it was not recognised officially as a theatre of war. She was posted to Rawalpindi, the  Victoria War Hospital in Bombay and subsequently on His Majesty’s Hospital Ship ‘Ellora’, then finally  the Gerard Freeman Thomas [War] Hospital in Bombay. In 1919 she married in Bombay, one of the 20 Australian nurses who married in India.
*A List of Australian Army nurses who married overseas during WW1 includes those who married in India.<ref> frev (Heather Ford) [https://www.greatwarforum.org/blogs/entry/2836-aans-nurses-who-married-overseas-during-ww1/ AANS NURSES WHO MARRIED OVERSEAS DURING WW1] ''Great War Forum blog'' 15 October 2023, retrieved 18 October 2023.</ref>
*"Australian Nurses in India 1916-1919 " commences page 124 ''With Horse and Morse in Mesopotamia : the story of Anzacs in Asia'' edited by Keast Burke 1927, and is available online below.
 
Also see Historical books online below.
===First World War hospital for wounded Indian soldiers===
[http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME054-1915/page185-volume54-6thmarch1915.pdf The Lady Hardinge Hospital at Brockenhurst, in the New Forest, [England<nowiki>]</nowiki> for wounded Indian soldiers]  The sisters at the hospital , who performed mainly supervisory duties, all spoke Hindustani.<ref> [http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME054-1915/page185-volume54-6thmarch1915.pdf ''The British Journal of Nursing'' March 6, 1915  Volume 54, page 187].</ref> The newly constructed hospital, consisting of a series of huts, opened 20 January 1915<ref>[http://archive.org/stream/orderofhospitalo00finciala#page/36/mode/2up  page 36] ''The Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem, and its Grand priory of England'' by H.W. Fincham 1916 Archive.org</ref>, although  there had been other hospital facilities from about September 1914<ref>World War 1 document by Hampshire Record Office, page 18  [http://www.hants.gov.uk/rh/archives/ww1.pdf pdf]</ref>, when Balmer Lawns and Forest Park Hotels had been commandeered and fitted out as a medical facility, with temporary structures in the grounds providing additional accommodation. Later Morant Hall became Meerut Indian General Hospital to provide additional accomodation. The Lady Hardinge Hospital for Wounded Indian Soldiers was  used from the outbreak of war until the end of 1915, when the Indian Army Corps which it supported, was transferred to Egypt.  The Indian hospital was then transferred to Brighton  and the Brockenhurst site  became No 1 New Zealand General Hospital. At the same time Morant Hall became Morant War Hospital. For more about Brighton, see [[Western Front]].
 
[https://nfknowledge.org/contributions/brockenhurst-a-first-world-war-hospital-village-1914/#map=10/-1.57/50.81/0/24:0:0.6|39:1:1|40:1:1 Brockenhurst a First World War Hospital village 1914] by Gareth Owen.  nfknowledge.org. This article contains further links and there are a number of photographs.
<br>Names of some of the nurses from BJN 21 November 1914-23 October 1915:[http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME053-1914/page402-volume53-21stnovember1914.pdf 1]
[http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME054-1915/page026-volume54-9thjanuary1915.pdf  2]
[http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME054-1915/page152-volume54-20thfebruary1915.pdf  3]
[http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME054-1915/page171-volume54-27thfebruary1915.pdf 4]
[http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME054-1915/page278-volume54-3rdapril1915.pdf 5]
[http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME055-1915/page337-volume55-23rdoctober1915.pdf 6]
 
===Second World War===
See Historical books online, refer below.
 
During  [[Second World War|WW2]] a  large group of VADs left London who ended up working near the Burma Front.<ref>catblues44. [http://boards.ancestry.com.au/topics.Military.wwii.nurses/191/mb.ashx V.A.D. nurses London] ''Rootsweb Message Board: Military: World War II: Nurses'' 19 May 2015.  Mentions the book '' Sister Sahibs: The VADs With the 14th Army 1944-46'' by Marian Robertston. Retrieved 16 December 2016.</ref>
===Records about Military Nursing===
*[https://books.google.com.au/books?id=72PNDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT137 "Researching the Indian Army Nursing Service/QAMSI"]  (digital page 137?) ''Tracing Your Service Women Ancestors: A Guide for Family Historians'' by Mary Ingham. Google Books. Advises that the Indian Army List has some details from 1891 and that QAMSI also appear in ''Thacker’s Indian Medical Directory''.
**See '''[[Indian Army List online]]'''
**''Thacker's Indian Medical Directory''. For availability , see [[Doctor#Lists of medical officers| Doctor - Lists of medical officers - Other  lists]].
*:'''Note''', the 1931 ''Thacker's'' is known to contain entries for nurses, but it is not clear whether all editions do so. For online editions, see [[Directories online#Thacker's Indian Directory|Directories online - Thacker's Indian Directory]].
====Records at the British Library about Military Nursing====
Records relating to nursing at the [[British Library]] include:
*The Indian Nursing Service-Registers of Candidates [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/records.aspx?cat=059-iorlmil_4-3_3&cid=1-1-1#1-1-1 '''IOR/L/MIL/9/430-432'''] (1887-1920). The nurses were recruited in England.
*Collection 262 Indian Nursing Service [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/records.aspx?cat=059-iorlmil_3-2_1-4&cid=1-1-39#1-1-39 '''IOR/L/MIL/7/11316-11616'''] (1886-1940), which includes items 262/1-270 and 262A/1-188 with many individual names mentioned.
*Collection 262/103 [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/records.aspx?cat=059-iorlmil_3-2_1-4&cid=1-1-39-106#1-1-39-106 '''IOR/L/MIL/7/11421'''] (1913) states "Candidates for Queen Alexandra's Military Nursing Service for India must either be of British parentage or naturalised British subjects."
*Nursing sisters and higher ranks are recorded in the Indian Army List from 1891. Staff Nurses are recorded from 1926.
Other records are listed on the British Library webpage, now archived [https://web.archive.org/web/20180818085807/http://www.bl.uk/reshelp/findhelpregion/asia/india/indiaofficerecordsfamilyhistory/occupations/indianmedicalservice/indianmedical.html Indian Medical Service]
 
====Records at the National Archives====
*The National Archives Research Guide [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/british-army-nurses/  British Army nurses] contains no specific reference to India.
*[http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline/nursing.asp Nursing Service Records, First World War] allows search and download of information. The records relate to "over 15,000 First World War service records for nurses who served in the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service, the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service (Reserve) and the Territorial Force Nursing Service". Some records relate to a period before the First World War but none post date 1939.
 
==Online records==
*[http://www.awin1.com/awclick.php?mid=2114&id=201071 findmypast] contains a database "Military Nurses 1856-1994" (located in Armed forces & conflict/Regimental & service records).    These are five sets of records transcribed  from those held at National Archives, and other sources, as explained in a  findmypast [http://www.findmypast.com.au/articles/world-records/full-list-of-united-kingdom-records/armed-forces-and-conflict/military-nurses-1856-1994 article]. These include 783 names from Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service. (Free to search but pay for full view).
* Ancestry, a pay website,  contains the following databases, located in  Schools, Directories & Church Histories (Search the [https://www.ancestry.co.uk/search/collections/catalog/?limitToCountry=1 Card Catalogue])
**UK & Ireland, Nursing Registers, 1898-1968 (source: Royal College of Nursing, London)
**Scotland, Nursing Applications, 1921-1945 (source: Royal College of Nursing, London)
**UK & Ireland, Queen's Nursing Institute Roll of Nurses, 1891-1931 (source: Wellcome Library, London)
**UK, The Midwives Roll, 1904-1959 (source: Wellcome Library, London)
:[https://www.rcn.org.uk/library/archives/family-history Family History/Digital publications] Royal College of Nursing website includes some details of the Ancestry databases.
 
==Singapore==
*[http://smj.sma.org.sg/2601/2601smj7.pdf  The Origins of Nursing in Singapore] by YK Lee MD  Singapore Medical Journal Volume 26, No 1,1985, page 53
*[http://www.sma.org.sg/smj/4611/4611cen1.pdf  Nursing and the beginnings of specialised nursing in early Singapore] by YK Lee Singapore Medical Journal Volume 46 No 11 2005, page 600
 
==Other Libraries and Archives==
*[http://www.rcn.org.uk/development/library/archives/contactus Royal College Of Nursing Archives] in Edinburgh. You need to discuss your requirements with the Archives Librarian and to book an appointment prior to visiting.
:*[http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/ Archive Search] - browse or search the historical journals and '''read online,''' and browse or search the archive catalogue.
:*[http://rcn-library.rcn.org.uk/uhtbin/cgisirsi/HD7MJcxPP6/LONDON/190020009/60/502/X Library Catalogue]. Some of the books mentioned in this article are also available at the Library in London.
:*[http://www.rcn.org.uk/development/library/contact Library] in London W1
 
*[http://library.wellcome.ac.uk/index.html Wellcome Library] London NW1 [http://library.wellcome.ac.uk/catalogues.html Catalogue]. Many of the books mentioned in this article are also available at this Library.
 
*Restricted Online Archive from Teachers College Library, Columbia University
:*[http://pocketknowledge.tc.columbia.edu/home.php/browse/32085  The Adelaide Nutting Historical Nursing Collection]
:*[http://pocketknowledge.tc.columbia.edu/home.php/browse/32108 Archives of the Department of Nursing Education]
:Search in “search and browse all items” using 'India, nurse' to see the books available. It may be possible to gain access to these online books. [http://library.tc.columbia.edu/col_policy.php Read this page] to find out how to [http://library.tc.columbia.edu/support.php?dq=pk_problem contact the University Library].
 
*The [http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0115;class=alt-db Cambridge University Library: Royal Commonwealth Society Library] has the  [http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0115%2FRCMS%2077 Indian Nursing Collection of Diana Hartley] the first full-time Secretary of the Trained Nurses Association of India (T.N.A.I.), 1935-1944 and her [http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0115%2FY3022NNN Indian Photograph Collection], the link giving details of her career, together with more Indian Nursing Photographs in the [http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0115%2FY3022OOO Dora Chadwick  Collection]
 
*Mrs. Eve Ross, speaking about her missionary nursing experiences (as Miss Eve Croydon) in United Provinces, 1941-1946 in an  [http://www.s-asian.cam.ac.uk/archive/audio/collection/e-ross/  interview] from the Oral History Collection of the [[University of Cambridge - Centre of South Asian Studies]], available to listen to, or read as a transcript.  The [http://www.s-asian.cam.ac.uk/archive/papers/ Archive papers collection] also has 271 very interesting, personal, letters home during that period.
 
==FIBIS resources==
*The FIBIS database contains the following records:
**[https://fibis.ourarchives.online/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_components&id=462&s_id=0 Nursing Personnel 1944] photograph, from Photographs/Military
**[https://fibis.ourarchives.online/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_components&id=1339&s_id=438 Asylum Press Almanac - List of Qualified Midwives] List of Qualified Midwives, European and East Indian from the Government Lying-in-Hospital, Madras, 1865, from Education & Work/Professions
**[https://fibis.ourarchives.online/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_components&id=1330&s_id=438 Madras Nurses and Midwives Register for 1940.] Madras Nurses and Midwives Registers held by the British Library Ref: IOR/V/25/851. Listing Names, Dates and Qualifications, from Education & Work/Professions
*"Image of a Qualification Certificate to practice as a midwife granted by the Government Maternity Hospital Madras" to Jane Bullock, dated 4th September 1909(?). There is a statement on the certificate advising “This institution is recognised as a training School by the Central Midwives’ Board, London”. Previously, but seemingly not currently, available on FIBIS on Facebook.
*"Indian Army Prisoners of War in the Second World War" by Hedley Sutton ''FIBIS Journal, No 12 (Autumn 2004)''. For details of how to access this article online, see [[FIBIS Journals]]. An alphabetical listing by surname of nearly 900 Indian Army personnel who became prisoners of war between 1941 and 1945 is available at the British Library. Most were held by the Japanese, with some held by the Italians.The vast majority are Europeans, but a handful of Indians are recorded; plus a few Indian Medical Service nursing sisters
*"Medals to a Nurse" by Allan Stanistreet ''FIBIS Journal Number 28 (Autumn 2012)'' pages 39-40. Miss W McGregor was a member of the '''Temporary Nursing Service, India''' during the [[First World War]]. See [[FIBIS Journals]] for details of how to access this article
*"'Some hot water quickly' – Sister Sallie’s Kaisar-i-Hind" by Kimberley John Lindsay ''FIBIS Journal Number 35 (Spring 2016)'' pages 11-17. For details of how to access this article, see [[FIBIS Journals]]. Sarah (Sallie) Maria Round worked as a Missionary Nurse with the All Saints Sisters, mainly in the Bombay Presidency, but latterly at Peshawar, receiving the medal in 1946.
 
==External links==
*The kidnapping of Mollie Ellis from [[Kohat]] cantonment by Afridi  tribesmen from the Khyber Pass region 14 April 1923  and the rescue expedition which included Mrs Lilian Starr matron at the [[Peshawar]] Mission Hospital. [https://web.archive.org/web/20111103080544/http://michaelelambert.com/main/pdf/The_Kidnapping_of_Mollie_Ellis_by_Afridi_Tribesmem-Michael_E_Lambert%20_C_.pdf  "The Kidnapping of Mollie Ellis by Afridi Tribesmen" by Michael E  Lambert], now archived.  [http://www.lookandlearn.com/blog/?p=3641 Article from Lookandlearn.com], [http://www.flickr.com/photos/13305961@N00/4946412546/ Photographs] from the Illustrated London News (26 May 1923 pages 894-895 ) Flickr.com. An account of her rescue mission ''Tales of Tirah and Lesser Tibet'' by Lilian A Starr, published 1924  is available to read  online on [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.100747 Archive.org].
*Mrs Adela Cottle (born Adela Collins) (1861-1940) She was active in the  St John Ambulance Brigade and the Red Cross in Calcutta, for over forty years,  particularly during World War 1 and the post war period.  Her awards included [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_the_British_Empire  CBE],  and the  [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaisar-i-Hind Kaisar-i-Hind] silver medal in 1915 <ref>[http://www.archive.org/stream/indianbiographic00raoc#page/22/mode/2up page 23 of the Appendix, ''The Indian Biographical Dictionary'' 1915]. Edited by C. Hayavadana Rao Archive.org. There was also an obituary in ''The Times'' [London] dated 22 February 1940.</ref>
*[http://greatwarnurses.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/miss-loch-and-indian-nursing-service.html Miss Loch and the Indian Nursing Service] greatwarnurses.blogspot.co.uk. (See also Historical books online section below for memoir)
*[https://doi.org/10.1177/2377960820920128 "Historical Trajectory of Men in Nursing in India"] by Sathish Kumar Jayapal and  Judie Arulappan, first published May 13, 2020. Male nurses were permitted from 1939 in Madras Presidency.
*WW2 [http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/26/a1307026.shtml Wartime Memories of a Nurse] by Kitty Calcutt. Includes a posting to 3 B.M.N.S.U. British Mobile Neuro-Surgical Unit. Number 3 at [[Comilla|Camilla]], which treated soldiers from the Burma frontline. bbc.co.uk/ww2peopleswar
 
===Historical books online===
*Editions of ''The British Journal of Nursing'', ranging from Volume 44, January 1910 to Volume 69, July 1922 (broken range) are available on the website [http://archive.org/search.php?query=british%20Journal%20of%20Nursing%20AND%20mediatype%3Atexts Archive.org]. Also see [[Nurse#Journals|Journals, above]]. Some examples of articles:
**[http://archive.org/stream/britishjournalnu55londuoft#page/116/mode/2up  Award of the Kaiser-i Hind medal to Miss AJ Weighall]  page 116 ''The British Journal of Nursing'' Volume 55 July 1915-December 1915
**''The British Journal of Nursing'' Volume 61 July 1918-December 1918
***[http://archive.org/stream/britishjournalof61londuoft#page/114/mode/2up/ page 114] mentions hospitals in Bombay, and includes a photograph of Sisters at the J J Hospital.
***[http://archive.org/stream/britishjournalof61londuoft#page/142/mode/2up/ pages 142-143] include the award of the Kaiser-i Hind medal to Miss Charlotte Richmond Mill, Matron St Georges’ Hospital Bombay, with photograph.
***[http://archive.org/stream/britishjournalof61londuoft#page/152/mode/1up page 152] "Gallant Service in Mesopotamia".
*[https://archive.org/details/jstor-3401905 "The Indian Army Nursing Service"] by A. Arkle ''The American Journal of Nursing''      Vol. 2, No. 9, June, 1902, pages 652-655 Archive.org
*[https://archive.org/details/jstor-3402194 "The Work of the Indian Army Nursing Service"]  by Miss Watt ''The American Journal of Nursing'' Volume 3, No 2  November 1902, pages 93-96 Archive.org
*[https://archive.org/details/jstor-3402675 ''Nursing in Mission Stations in India''] ''The American Journal of Nursing'' May 1907  pages 626-627 Archive.org
*[https://archive.org/details/jstor-3407933 "Nursing in India'"] by Wilhemina Noordyk ''The American Journal of Nursing'' February 1921  pages 296-299 Archive.org
*''A Memoir, by Catharine Grace Loch, Royal Red Cross, Senior Lady Superintendent Queen Alexandra's Military Nursing Service for India'' (published 1905) [http://www.archive.org/details/catharinegracel01bradgoog Archive.org Full View]
*''Official History of the Australian Army Medical Services, 1914–1918''  ''Volume III'' : ''Special Problems and Services'' by Colonel A G Butler published 1943.  [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.211415/page/n627 Pages 567-571] cover Australian nurses in India. Archive.org, Digital Library of India Collection.
*"Australian Nurses in India 1916-1919". Scroll to page 124, ''With Horse and Morse in Mesopotamia: The Story of Anzacs in Asia'' edited by Keast Burke 1927.  NZsappers.org.nz has two digital files/series, the first contains some digital pages  which  are of very poor quality. The second series of files from nzsappers.org.nz: [https://www.nzsappers.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Pages-1-70.pdf Pages 1-70], [https://www.nzsappers.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Pages-71-132.pdf pages 71-132]; [https://www.nzsappers.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Pages-133-206.pdf pages 133-206]. Also includes nominal rolls at the back of the book. Includes a list of the main WW1 '''hospitals''' in India.  nzsappers.org.nz.
*[https://archive.org/details/IanHay1951ArmyNursing  ''One Hundred Years of Army Nursing : The Story of the British Army Nursing Service from the time of Florence Nightingale to the present day''] by John Hay Beith  1953 Archive.org
**[https://archive.org/stream/IanHay1951ArmyNursing#page/n253/mode/2up "Part Three: The Second World War: Far East: Burma"] page  246
:[https://archive.org/details/sistersinarmsbri0000tyre_y2h3/mode/2up ''Sisters in Arms : British Army Nurses Tell Their Story''] by Nicola Tyrer 2008. Archive.org Books to Borrow/Lending Library. Second World War. Includes
:*[https://archive.org/details/sistersinarmsbri0000tyre_y2h3/page/254/mode/2up India and Burma] page 255
:[https://archive.org/details/joyceswarsecondw0000parr ''Joyce's War : the Second World War Journal of a Queen Alexandra Nurse]'' by Joyce Ffoulkes Parry, edited by Rhiannon Evans 2015. Archive.org Books to Borrow/Lending Library. She served on a troop ship, a hospital ship and in land hospitals in Alexandria and Calcutta 1940-1944.
 
==Notes==
# The [[British Library]] has a copy of this book. You can [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6417940&referer=brief_results search for a Library] which has it, or see [http://books.google.com/books?id=PayPGQAACAAJ Google Books' No Preview link].
# [http://www.archive.org/stream/historyofnursing00toolrich#page/336/mode/2up ''A History of Nursing in the British Empire''] by Sarah A. Southall Tooley (published 1906) has a section on India, pages 339-349. Archive.org
# Wilson's book is available at the BL and in snippet view on [http://books.google.com/books?id=1LAWAAAAMAAJ Google Books].  
 
==References==
<references />


*The British Library has The Nursing Journal of India from December 1926 (with a few scattered editions prior to this) to February 1939 and Cambridge University has an incomplete holding from 1935 to 1989. It would be expected there would be mention of many individual nurses.




[[Category:Occupations]]
[[Category:Occupations]]
[[Category:Health]]
[[Category:Health]]

Latest revision as of 03:38, 8 August 2024

Civil Nursing

General information on nursing in India can be found in the book A Brief History of Nursing in India and Pakistan by Alice Wilkinson (1958).1 Wilkinson was associated with nursing in India for more than forty years and in 1908 was the first trained British nurse to join St Stephens Hospital, Delhi. Alongside a history of the development of the profession from its earliest times, she describes nursing specialities, including leprosy and tuberculosis work.

A History of Nursing in the British Empire by Sarah A. Southall Tooley (published 1906) has a section on India, pages 339-349.2 Interesting information in the book:

  • It is stated that the Calcutta Hospital Nurses Institution was founded in 1859 “with which is associated the Lady Canning Home, Calcutta, institutions doing valuable work today in supplying nurses to hospitals and in the training of skilled private staff."
  • Nurse training at the General Hospital, Madras and the Cama Hospital, Bombay was also mentioned. The latter is a hospital for women and children. It subsequently became affiliated with the Grant Medical College in 1923 and part of the Sir J.J. Hospital Group.
  • “The nursing of Europeans in India has been met to some extent in the large towns by the Clewer, Wantage and All Saints Sisterhoods and kindred private institutions." (Refer Religious Orders below).

Training and Hospital Nursing

This article abstract refers to the training of midwives in Madras in a Government lying-in [obstetrics] hospital from the 1840's

For many years nursing training was the preserve of Europeans and Anglo-Indians. The Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy (JJ) Hospital (Bombay) was the first to train nurses in western India. The first Indian lady to come forward for nursing training was Bai Kashibai Ganpat in 1891 in Bombay, implying that European and Eurasians were training prior to this date. In the years that followed, nursing schools were established all over the country in collaboration with government, state and private hospitals. [1]

St Stephens Hospital, Delhi started a training School for nurses under Alice Wilkinson — the first trained British nurse who joined the hospital in 1908. Wilkinson became the hospital's nursing superintendent and is credited with raising the standard of nursing not only in St Stephen's but in the rest of India as well. She founded the Trained Nurses’ Association of India and worked as its secretary until 1948. [2]

Associations

The Association of Nursing Superintendents was founded in 1905 at Lucknow. The organization was composed of nine European nurses holding administrative posts in hospitals. At the 1908 Annual Conference held in Bombay, a decision was taken to establish the Trained Nurses’ Association. This Association was inaugurated in 1909. The Association of Nursing Superintendents and the Trained Nurses’ Association were amalgamated in 1922 and renamed The Trained Nurses’ Association of India (TNAI).

The Up-Country Nursing Association for Europeans In India, founded in 1892 in the UK, sent trained nurses to India for employment under local committees nursing sick Europeans in up-country districts. Lady Minto’s Nursing Association, established 1906 in the UK, sent nurses to India, its chief object being to supply trained female nurses and midwives to patients requiring attendance either in their private residences or in public or private hospitals in any part of the Indian Empire. The former organisation later amalgamated with the latter.

The Royal College of Nursing Archives (Edinburgh) (see Other Libraries and Archives) holds the record "Lady Minto's Indian Nursing Association" (catalogue reference C/123). This British Journal of Nursing article gives staff numbers in 1926. Emma Wilson was working in India with the Lady Minto’s Indian Nursing Association from the 1920’s? until 1947. She was Chief Lady Superintendent from 1938 to 1947. Wilson wrote Gone With the Raj, published 1974.3

The Medical Missionary Association of India was established in 1905. In 1925 there was a name change to the Christian Medical Association of India

Journals

The Nursing Journal of India (Nurs J India) began publishing in 1912. It would be expected there would be mention of many individual nurses in the Journals. The British Library has the Nursing Journal of India from December 1926 (with a few scattered editions prior to this) to February 1939 and Cambridge University Library has an incomplete holding from 1935 to 1989. The Royal College of Nursing Archives in Edinburgh (refer section below) believes they have early issues of this Journal (or they can obtain them) but they are not in the computerised catalogue at present.

Historical Nursing Journals is an online searchable database of PDF images showing British journal pages from the Royal College of Nursing Library, then select Archives/Family history/Historical nursing journals or direct link Search The Nursing Record / The British Journal of Nursing 1888-1956 image database. There are many mentions of India in these Journals. Examples include:

Also see Historical books online. below

Nurse Registration

England

In England, legislation was passed in 1919 which became effective from 1921. The National Archives has Registers of Nurses from 1921 in the series DT 10. This link gives some details about records originating from the General Nursing Council for England and Wales. It seems likely that some Indian trained nurses were also registered in England, as there is an associated series DT 18 General Nursing Council for England and Wales: Registrar: Correspondence and Papers, Overseas, which has the following catalogue entries:

  • DT 18/72 West Bengal; (India) general 1937 June 7-1948 July 28
  • DT 18/76 India Office, London 1924 Mar 25-1941 Dec 22
  • DT 18/77 Nursing Council (In Sub series Bengal) 1921 Jan 18-1947 Oct 18
  • DT 18/101 General Hospital, Rangoon 1926 Oct 11-1935 July 12
  • DT 18/141 Trained Nurses Association 1923 Mar 15-1958 July 24
  • DT 18/146 Presidency General Hospital, Calcutta 1923 July 11-1932 June 21

The British Library has a catalogue entry: Nurses: registration under the Nurses Registration Act 1919 of Nurses on the Register of the State Medical Faculty of Bengal IOR/L/E/7/1167, File 4082 21 Aug 1923-13 Oct 1932. This link gives details of the State Medical Faculty of Bengal.

India

It appears that registration of nurses in India commenced on a Provincial basis, first in Madras in 1928 and in Burma from 1922. This RCN link is from October 1933 and indicates that the UK and Madras had reciprocal registration.

The British Library has two registers of nurses and midwives in Madras:

It has the following catalogue entries which indicate some of the particular Acts:

  • Medical: General questions - Bengal Nurses Act X of 1934 IOR/L/E/9/617 Collection 100/12, Aug 1933-Oct 1934
  • Medical: General questions - Punjab Nurses Registration Act 1932 with Amending Acts IOR/L/E/9/627 Collection 100/22, May 1932-Feb 1937
  • Medical: General questions - Central Provinces Nurses Regulation Act 1936 IOR/L/E/9/630 Collection 100/24, Dec 1935-Jan 1937
  • Medical: General questions - Bihar and Orissa Nurses Registration Act 1935 with Amendments IOR/L/E/9/637 Collection 100/31, Aug 1934-May 1947
  • Medical: General questions - Nurses, Midwives and Health Visitors Registration Act 1935 IOR/L/E/9/638 Collection 100/32, Mar 1935-Jun 1935
  • Medical: General questions - Orissa Nurses and Midwives Registration Act 1938 IOR/L/E/9/641 Collection 100/35, Aug 1938-Oct 1938
  • Medical: General questions - Sind Nurses, Midwives, Health Visitors and Dais Registration Act 1939 IOR/L/E/9/645 Collection 100/39, May 1939-Jun 1945
  • Medical: General questions - North West Frontier Province Midwives Act 1939 IOR/L/E/9/646 Collection 100/40, Jun 1939-Jul 1942
  • Burma Nurses and Midwives Act 1922 IOR/L/E/7/1156 File 1869, 5 Apr 1922-29 Mar 1928
  • As to the registration of nurses and midwives in Madras: enactment of legislation IOR/L/E/7/1350 File 2905, 12 Jul 1924-13 Sep 1935.

Religious Orders

  • The Clewer Sisters were Sisters from the Anglican Community of St John the Baptist from Clewer (near Windsor in England) who came to Calcutta in 1881. They were involved, at various times, with nursing at the Calcutta General Hospital, Medical College Hospital, and the Eden Hospital (a maternity hospital) and also with nurse training through the Calcutta Hospital Nurses Institution, which was based at the Lady Canning Home. Scroll to the end of this link for brief details of their work in India.
  • All Saints Sisters of the Poor indicates this order was in India from 1878. [3] All Saints Sisters were at the J.J. Hospital, Bombay from 1880 and at St George’s Hospital Bombay from 1885 until 1902 [4]

Military Nurses in India

Female nursing was introduced in army hospitals in Madras in the late 1860’s, well before Calcutta. [6]

The Indian Nursing Service for the British Army in India was founded in 1888, when Miss Catharine Loch and five sisters went to Rawalpindi and Miss Oxley and three sisters went to Bangalore. Nurses were recruited in England. (Brief details of the conditions.[7]). The service became known as Queen Alexandra's Military Nursing Service for India in 1903, and in 1926 was amalgamated with Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service.
The Nursing Service for Indian Troops Hospitals was formed in 1926 (Later renamed the Indian Military Nursing Service). This was a permanent nursing service. In the prior years from 1916 the Indian Government had employed many nurses on six months contract.[8]

The work of Australian Army nurses in India in the First World War:

  • "Nursing for the British Raj" by Ashleigh Wadman 28 October 2014 Australian War Memorial website. Suggested further reading includes Guns and Brooches: Australian Army Nursing from the Boer War to the Gulf War by Jan Bassett 1997 which is stated elsewhere[9] to provide “the best most accurate info on Australians nursing in India”.
  • "Reading between unwritten lines: Australian Army nurses in India, 1916-19" by Ruth Rae. Australian War Memorial website, archived webpage. Describes the 34th Welsh General Hospital (34 WGH) at Deolali.
  • Constance Jessie Brooks was one of over 500 members of the AANS [Australian Army Nursing Service] who served in India during the First World War although it was not recognised officially as a theatre of war. She was posted to Rawalpindi, the Victoria War Hospital in Bombay and subsequently on His Majesty’s Hospital Ship ‘Ellora’, then finally the Gerard Freeman Thomas [War] Hospital in Bombay. In 1919 she married in Bombay, one of the 20 Australian nurses who married in India.
  • A List of Australian Army nurses who married overseas during WW1 includes those who married in India.[10]
  • "Australian Nurses in India 1916-1919 " commences page 124 With Horse and Morse in Mesopotamia : the story of Anzacs in Asia edited by Keast Burke 1927, and is available online below.

Also see Historical books online below.

First World War hospital for wounded Indian soldiers

The Lady Hardinge Hospital at Brockenhurst, in the New Forest, [England] for wounded Indian soldiers The sisters at the hospital , who performed mainly supervisory duties, all spoke Hindustani.[11] The newly constructed hospital, consisting of a series of huts, opened 20 January 1915[12], although there had been other hospital facilities from about September 1914[13], when Balmer Lawns and Forest Park Hotels had been commandeered and fitted out as a medical facility, with temporary structures in the grounds providing additional accommodation. Later Morant Hall became Meerut Indian General Hospital to provide additional accomodation. The Lady Hardinge Hospital for Wounded Indian Soldiers was used from the outbreak of war until the end of 1915, when the Indian Army Corps which it supported, was transferred to Egypt. The Indian hospital was then transferred to Brighton and the Brockenhurst site became No 1 New Zealand General Hospital. At the same time Morant Hall became Morant War Hospital. For more about Brighton, see Western Front.

Brockenhurst a First World War Hospital village 1914 by Gareth Owen. nfknowledge.org. This article contains further links and there are a number of photographs.
Names of some of the nurses from BJN 21 November 1914-23 October 1915:1 2 3 4 5 6

Second World War

See Historical books online, refer below.

During WW2 a large group of VADs left London who ended up working near the Burma Front.[14]

Records about Military Nursing

Records at the British Library about Military Nursing

Records relating to nursing at the British Library include:

  • The Indian Nursing Service-Registers of Candidates IOR/L/MIL/9/430-432 (1887-1920). The nurses were recruited in England.
  • Collection 262 Indian Nursing Service IOR/L/MIL/7/11316-11616 (1886-1940), which includes items 262/1-270 and 262A/1-188 with many individual names mentioned.
  • Collection 262/103 IOR/L/MIL/7/11421 (1913) states "Candidates for Queen Alexandra's Military Nursing Service for India must either be of British parentage or naturalised British subjects."
  • Nursing sisters and higher ranks are recorded in the Indian Army List from 1891. Staff Nurses are recorded from 1926.

Other records are listed on the British Library webpage, now archived Indian Medical Service

Records at the National Archives

  • The National Archives Research Guide British Army nurses contains no specific reference to India.
  • Nursing Service Records, First World War allows search and download of information. The records relate to "over 15,000 First World War service records for nurses who served in the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service, the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service (Reserve) and the Territorial Force Nursing Service". Some records relate to a period before the First World War but none post date 1939.

Online records

  • findmypast contains a database "Military Nurses 1856-1994" (located in Armed forces & conflict/Regimental & service records). These are five sets of records transcribed from those held at National Archives, and other sources, as explained in a findmypast article. These include 783 names from Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service. (Free to search but pay for full view).
  • Ancestry, a pay website, contains the following databases, located in Schools, Directories & Church Histories (Search the Card Catalogue)
    • UK & Ireland, Nursing Registers, 1898-1968 (source: Royal College of Nursing, London)
    • Scotland, Nursing Applications, 1921-1945 (source: Royal College of Nursing, London)
    • UK & Ireland, Queen's Nursing Institute Roll of Nurses, 1891-1931 (source: Wellcome Library, London)
    • UK, The Midwives Roll, 1904-1959 (source: Wellcome Library, London)
Family History/Digital publications Royal College of Nursing website includes some details of the Ancestry databases.

Singapore

Other Libraries and Archives

  • Archive Search - browse or search the historical journals and read online, and browse or search the archive catalogue.
  • Library Catalogue. Some of the books mentioned in this article are also available at the Library in London.
  • Library in London W1
  • Restricted Online Archive from Teachers College Library, Columbia University
Search in “search and browse all items” using 'India, nurse' to see the books available. It may be possible to gain access to these online books. Read this page to find out how to contact the University Library.

FIBIS resources

  • The FIBIS database contains the following records:
  • "Image of a Qualification Certificate to practice as a midwife granted by the Government Maternity Hospital Madras" to Jane Bullock, dated 4th September 1909(?). There is a statement on the certificate advising “This institution is recognised as a training School by the Central Midwives’ Board, London”. Previously, but seemingly not currently, available on FIBIS on Facebook.
  • "Indian Army Prisoners of War in the Second World War" by Hedley Sutton FIBIS Journal, No 12 (Autumn 2004). For details of how to access this article online, see FIBIS Journals. An alphabetical listing by surname of nearly 900 Indian Army personnel who became prisoners of war between 1941 and 1945 is available at the British Library. Most were held by the Japanese, with some held by the Italians.The vast majority are Europeans, but a handful of Indians are recorded; plus a few Indian Medical Service nursing sisters
  • "Medals to a Nurse" by Allan Stanistreet FIBIS Journal Number 28 (Autumn 2012) pages 39-40. Miss W McGregor was a member of the Temporary Nursing Service, India during the First World War. See FIBIS Journals for details of how to access this article
  • "'Some hot water quickly' – Sister Sallie’s Kaisar-i-Hind" by Kimberley John Lindsay FIBIS Journal Number 35 (Spring 2016) pages 11-17. For details of how to access this article, see FIBIS Journals. Sarah (Sallie) Maria Round worked as a Missionary Nurse with the All Saints Sisters, mainly in the Bombay Presidency, but latterly at Peshawar, receiving the medal in 1946.

External links

Historical books online

Sisters in Arms : British Army Nurses Tell Their Story by Nicola Tyrer 2008. Archive.org Books to Borrow/Lending Library. Second World War. Includes
Joyce's War : the Second World War Journal of a Queen Alexandra Nurse by Joyce Ffoulkes Parry, edited by Rhiannon Evans 2015. Archive.org Books to Borrow/Lending Library. She served on a troop ship, a hospital ship and in land hospitals in Alexandria and Calcutta 1940-1944.

Notes

  1. The British Library has a copy of this book. You can search for a Library which has it, or see Google Books' No Preview link.
  2. A History of Nursing in the British Empire by Sarah A. Southall Tooley (published 1906) has a section on India, pages 339-349. Archive.org
  3. Wilson's book is available at the BL and in snippet view on Google Books.

References

  1. Nursing in India by Shubhada Sakurikar
  2. St Stephen's Hospital, Delhi
  3. page 15 footnote All Saints Sisters of the Poor: an Anglican Sisterhood in the Nineteenth Century by Susan Mumm, (published 2001) Google Books
  4. Western medicine and public health in colonial Bombay, 1845-1895 by Mridula Ramanna 2002
  5. A History of Christianity (Volume VI) the Great Century in Northern Africa and Asia 1800-1914
  6. Page 73 Florence Nightingale and the Health of the Raj by Jharna Gourlay (2003) (page no longer available online)
  7. Angels and Citizens: British Women as Military Nurses, 1854-1914 by Anne Summers (1988), page 114, gives brief details of the conditions (page no longer available online)
  8. royalredcross [Norman]. QAMNSI Nurses Great War Forum 31 July 2019. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
  9. kjharris. Online articles: AANS (Australian nurses) in India Great War Forum 19 July 2016. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  10. frev (Heather Ford) AANS NURSES WHO MARRIED OVERSEAS DURING WW1 Great War Forum blog 15 October 2023, retrieved 18 October 2023.
  11. The British Journal of Nursing March 6, 1915 Volume 54, page 187.
  12. page 36 The Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem, and its Grand priory of England by H.W. Fincham 1916 Archive.org
  13. World War 1 document by Hampshire Record Office, page 18 pdf
  14. catblues44. V.A.D. nurses London Rootsweb Message Board: Military: World War II: Nurses 19 May 2015. Mentions the book Sister Sahibs: The VADs With the 14th Army 1944-46 by Marian Robertston. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
  15. page 23 of the Appendix, The Indian Biographical Dictionary 1915. Edited by C. Hayavadana Rao Archive.org. There was also an obituary in The Times [London] dated 22 February 1940.