Celebrating Nurses

Georgia State University celebrates the history of nursing

For Celebrating Nurses
Published on: 05/06/07

This is a landmark year for nurses in Georgia. The Georgia Nurses Association will celebrate its 100th anniversary during its 2007 biennial convention in Savannah Aug. 31 to Sept. 1.

Georgia State University's Special Collections Department and Archives is honoring nurses with an exhibit titled "Angels of Mercy: A History of the Nursing Profession." On display through March, 2008, the exhibit features nursing records and artifacts from the Georgia Nurses Association, the National Conclave of Grady Graduate Nurses, other state nursing associations and private collections.

The Georgia State library is the largest repository of nursing collections in the Southeast, housing the records of the nurses associations in Georgia, South Carolina, Kentucky, Maryland and the District of Columbia.

"We do a different exhibit from our collections every year, and this seemed like a really good time to honor nursing," said Morna Gerrard, archivist for women's collections at Georgia State.

"The timing of the release of this collection is impeccable," said Linda Easterly, Georgia Nurses Association president. "As we move boldly into the future, we stand firmly on the foundations laid by our past leaders. It is certain that, without the dedication of the brave young women who founded GNA, nursing would not be as advanced a profession as it is today."

In 1907, 35 nurses chartered the Georgia State Association of Graduate Nurses (later shortened to Georgia Nurses Association) to "procure state registration, to elevate and maintain the standard of nursing, to protect the public, and to promote good fellowship among all nurses."

They adopted a registration bill, which created the Board of Nurse Examiners, the members of which were nominated by the GNA, were appointed by the governor and had the power to examine and register nurses.

The Medical Association of Georgia lobbied against the bill and introduced amendments to keep doctors in control of the board, but nurses got the bill passed in the Georgia General Assembly without major revisions.

The exhibit at Georgia State features the original petition for registration, along with other historical records, photos of nurses at work and play, a selection of nursing caps and nursing school pins from the last 100 years.

"I think the nurses' emphasis on professionalism is the most striking thing about this collection," Gerrard said. "It was a struggle for them not to be perceived as handmaidens of doctors but to be recognized publicly as professionals."

Gerrard was interested to see how nurses were involved in historical events of the last century.

The records show the GNA's involvement in recruiting and organizing nurses for civilian and military duty during World War I and World War II.

Evidence that segregation extended to nursing is demonstrated by the different caps that black and white nurses wore at Grady Memorial Hospital. Records also show that many GNA members worked for desegregation and that black nurses started joining the organization in the late 1960s.

"I have always had such respect for nurses, who are both highly qualified and incredibly kind, and that respect is even greater now," Gerrard said.