Florence Nightingale's Rivals (Hardback)
Nursing through the Crimea
Imprint: Pen & Sword History
Pages: 200
Illustrations: 30 black and white illustrations
ISBN: 9781399006651
Published: 13th December 2024
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Florence Nightingale is synonymous with nursing in the Crimean War of 1854 -1856. There were, however, many other women who contributed to nursing at this time. Martha Clough, who dismissed the rule of Nightingale and took charge of nursing the Highland Regiments; Eliza Roberts, an experienced hospital surgical nurse who became Nightingale’s aide-de-camp, nursing Nightingale when she fell ill with Crimean Fever and those with a wider scope of caring, such as Mary Seacole, whose nutritious supplements and caring demeanour meant everything to the soldiers.
This book focuses on the relationship between Nightingale and two very interesting characters: the irascible Betsy Cadwaladyr and the equally strong-willed Mother M. Francis Bridgeman, head of the nursing Irish Sisters of Mercy in the Crimea. Bridgeman came from a similar social standing as Nightingale but whose pathway saw her leaving society lifestyle as a young girl and following the convent life. Cadwaladyr earned Nightingale’s respect towards the end of her time in the Crimea due to her care of soldiers and her ability to run the kitchen at Balaklava, but nothing would change her stubborn dislike of Nightingale.
The Sisters of Mercy, much overlooked in nursing history, were clinically nursing the victims of cholera and dysentery (two of the biggest killers in the Crimea) in their localities long before their journey to the battlefront. Betsy Cadwaladyr preferred domestic service and cooking to nursing, whilst Nightingale had the unenviable task of proving the nursing experiment to those watching from Westminster, trying not to upset the medical men as well as trying to filter out the best women to nurse with her, which was a nightmare in itself.
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
NetGalley, Bethany Swafford
Florence Nightingale is celebrated for her nursing work during the Crimean War, but she was surrounded by remarkable women like Martha Clough, Eliza Roberts, and Mary Seacole, who also made vital contributions. This book delves into Nightingale’s complex relationships with Betsy Cadwaladyr, a strong-willed caregiver known for her cooking skills, and Mother M. Francis Bridgeman, leader of the Irish Sisters of Mercy, who nursed cholera and dysentery victims long before reaching the battlefield. Against the backdrop of these diverse efforts, Nightingale faced the immense challenge of proving the value of nursing while navigating societal and medical resistance.
I very much enjoyed this book. Florence Nightingale is a name well-known in relation to nursing, and the work she did to ensure women nurses became respected in the medical field. I found the history of nursing that the author included very interesting. It provided a lot of nuances to the situation that happened in Crimea.
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
NetGalley, Michelle Coates
Superb writing from this author, a very eye catching cover, this book will go far, 5 stars. Blindingly excellent ... This book should come with a disclaimer as once you start reading you aren’t going to want to walk away. So insightful and lots of facts I'd never previously heard.
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
NetGalley, Kathryn McLeer
I really enjoyed getting to learn about other nurses around the time of Florence Nightingale. The research was everything that I was looking for and enjoyed how everything that I wanted about this. Louise Wyatt has a strong writing style and was glad I got to read this.
About Louise Wyatt
Louise Wyatt has loved history since discovering Dunster Castle in Somerset aged six years old. Reading and writing as soon as school started, Louise has published three local history books between 2017 and 2018 and more recently, A History of Nursing. A registered nurse and author, medieval history is a particular passion, with nursing history from antiquity onwards coming a close second.
The Crimean War (Hardback)
When this book was first published in 1971 the opening paragraph of the blurb read: 'You could fill a library with books about the Crimean War, and that, paradoxically, is why this book has been written. For in this library you would find exhaustive histories, some reaching to several volumes; you would find biographies, commentaries, diaries and treatises written from this angle and from that ' but you would not find a single concise volume, a straightforward and objective account of the war covering the peripheral theatres as well as the Crimean itself, giving all the fundamental facts, yet…
By R L V ffrench BlakeClick here to buy both titles for £36.99