Mapping Care Project: The History of Black Nurses in Chicago

Footnote 5

Sloan, "A History of the Establishment and Early Development," 93, 103, 109, 112. For information on the Provident Visiting Nurse Service see Sloan, "A History of the Establishment and Early Development," 113, 117-118; Delora Mitchell, "Provident Hospital: A Black Institution Survives," (master's thesis, Northeastern Illinois University, 1972), 10. The Chicago Visiting Nurse Association eventually accepted Provident School of Nursing graduates but allegedly confined them to colored communities. Carrie E. Bullock, a 1909 Provident Nursing School alum retired from the Chicago Visiting Nurse Association after forty-seven years of service ending her tenure as Supervisor of the Dearborn Station to which she was appointed in 1926. For more information on Bullock see Adah B. Thoms, Pathfinders: A History of the Progress of Colored Graduate Nurses, (New York: McKay, 1929), 17-19; Nurses Brown and Adams, "Visiting Nurses Ass'n Awards Service Medal," Chicago Defender, August 17, 1938, National edition, 17. Thelma A. Brown, "Provident Grads Make Plans for A Big Homecoming," Chicago Defender, October 22, 1938, National edition, 17. Lucy Key Miller, "After 40 Years, Visiting Nursing Still 'Great Joy' to Miss Bullock," Chicago Daily Tribune, January 31, 1950, A2. Marian B. Campfield, "Provident Nurses In Home-Warming Tribute to Carrie Bullock, VNA," Chicago Defender, November 3, 1956, National edition, 14.

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