Mapping Care Project: The History of Black Nurses in Chicago

Footnote 1

See Roy C. Watkins, "A New Provident Hospital," Journal of the National Medical Association 87, no. 5 (1995): 337-338; Richard M. Krieg and Judith A. Cooksey, Provident Hospital: A Living Legacy (Chicago: Provident Foundation, 1998), 3-4. For background on Dr. Daniel Hale Williams, see Krieg and Cooksey, Provident Hospital, 5; Leah Rosenbaum, "Meet the Medical Pioneer Who Founded America's First Black-Owned Hospital," Forbes, July 10, 2021, https://www.forbes.com/sites/leahrosenbaum/2021/07/10/meet-the-pioneering-heart-surgeon-who-founded-americas-first-black-owned-hospital/?sh=570e64c56d67; Helen Buckler, Daniel Hale Williams: Negro Surgeon (New York: Pitman, 1968). For another interpretation of Reynold's "rejection" from the Illinois Training School for Nurses, see Grace Fay Schryver, A History of the Illinois Training School for Nurses, 1880-1929 (Chicago: Board of Directors of the Illinois Training School for Nurses, 1930), 63. In this account, Reynolds was told the ladies on the Board of Directors would accept her if she could handle 'possible hard treatment' from white pupil nurses and only if she could find two or three other potential colored applicants to enter the program. Reynolds is said to have commented she could endure from white pupil nurses 'anything short of blows' but didn't return with additional colored applicants. Instead instruction on how to start a hospital and nurse training school was provided with some financial support to an unnamed black individual with reference that Provident Hospital came into being shortly afterwards.

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