The Nursing ProfessionIn The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Business, Labor, and Economic History
Nursing of the sick, injured, and wounded has been performed by a variety of individuals, from the Roman tent companions and recuperating patients to Catholic nuns and Protestant deaconesses. Modern American nursing, however, developed in the post–Civil War period as part of the women's movement. Its impetus lay in the British example of Florence Nightingale, as well as the many women who gained recognition in the American Civil War for nursing soldiers. Nursing quickly became one of the breakthrough “new” occupations—along with librarian, social worker, elementary school teacher, and secretary—pioneered by women. Professional nursing accompanied the rise of general hospitals in America. The first three “Nightingale” schools opened in 1876: at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, at Bellevue Hospital in New York City, and at the Connecticut Training School in New Haven.