Mary Seacole Fact Sheet

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Mary Seacole Fact Sheet Mary Seacole Fact Sheet Mary Seacole was Mary Jane Grant was born in Kingston, Jamaica in 1805. Her father was a Scottish soldier, and her mother a Jamaican. Mary learned her nursing skills from her mother, who kept a boarding house for invalid soldiers. Although technically 'free', being of mixed race, Mary and her family had few civil rights - they could not vote, hold public office or enter the professions. In 1836, Mary married Edwin Seacole but the marriage was short-lived as he died in 1844. Seacole was an inveterate traveller, and before her marriage visited other parts of the Caribbean, including Cuba, Haiti and the Bahamas, as well as Central America and Britain. On these trips she complemented her knowledge of traditional medicine with European medical ideas. In 1854, Seacole travelled to England again, and approached the War Office, asking to be sent as an army nurse to the Crimea where there was known to be poor medical facilities for wounded soldiers. She was refused. Undaunted Seacole funded her own trip to the Crimea where she established the British Hotel near Balaclava to provide 'a mess-table and comfortable quarters for sick and convalescent officers'. She also visited the battlefield, sometimes under fire, to nurse the wounded, and became known as 'Mother Seacole'. Her reputation rivalled that of Florence Nightingale. After the war she returned to England destitute and in ill health. The press highlighted her plight and in July 1857 a benefit festival was organised to raise money for her, attracting thousands of people. Later that year, Seacole published her memoirs, 'The Wonderful Adventures of Mrs Seacole in Many Lands'. Seacole died on 14 May 1881 .
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  • Mary Seacole ×
    This website would like to remind you: Your browser (Apple Safari 4) is out of date. Update your browser for more × security, comfort and the best experience on this site. Article Mary Seacole Adventurer in Jamaica, Panama, and the Crimean War For the complete article with media resources, visit: http://education.nationalgeographic.com/news/mary-seacole/ BY NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EDUCATION STAFF Wednesday, November 27, 2013 Mary Seacole was a daring adventurer of the 19th century. A Jamaican woman of mixed race, she was awarded the Order of Merit posthumously by the government of Jamaica and celebrated as a “Black Briton” in the United Kingdom. Seacole authored a book based on her travels in Panama—where she ran a store for men going overland to the California Gold Rush—and her experiences in the Crimean War, where she ran a store and catering service for officers. There, her compassion and dedication earned her the nickname “Mother Seacole.” Mary Jane Grant was born in Kingston, Jamaica, sometime in 1805, although she kept her actual birth date a secret. (She gave the census an incorrect age twice, reporting herself five years younger than she actually was. Her year of birth is taken from her death certificate.) “As a female, and a widow, I may be well excused giving the precise date of this important event,” she writes in her book, Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands. “But I do not mind confessing that the century and myself were both young together, and that we have grown side-by-side into age and consequence.” Seacole’s father was a Scottish soldier stationed in Jamaica.
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  • Remembering Mary Seacole
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  • Dear Mrs. Seacole: Groundings with Mary Seacole on Slavery, Gender
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  • Mary Seacole
    Jamaicanhealer and war heroine � -�;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;�;==;;;;;;;:=::::::.., some of her illustrious dead". Letters began to OW I am not going to bl the authori- · 1 pour in asking: While the benevolent deeds of ties who would not llsten the offer of a Florence Nightingale are being handed down for Nmotherly yellow woman to go to the 1 posterity ...are the humble actions of Mrs. Crimeaand nurse her 'sons' there, suffering Seacole to be entirely forgotten? from cholera, diarrhoea, and a host of lesser ills. Soon, supporters appeared, including influen- In my country, people know our use, it would tial Dukes and Lords who had,been Commanders have been different; but here (in England) it was in the Crimea. A benefit in the Royal Surrey natural enough- although I had references, and Gardens in Kensington was organised. It lasted other voices spoke for me _ that they should laugh, good-naturedly enough at my offer. for four days, and over 1000 artistes performed. Undaunted and proud of her Creole status, Mary was hailed as a national heroine and Mary tried all routes open to her, including the received a commendation from Queen Victoria. Crimean War Fund to try and secure her trans- She was also decorated by the governments of port. She was turned down. Dismayed, but not France and Turkey. discouraged, Mary d.!termined to go to the Never one to laze about, Mary set to the task of Crimea on her own. She cashed in her assets and writing her autobiography, 'The Wonderful set out to the heat of the battle to build her own Adventures of Mrs.
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  • History Year 2 Autumn Mary Seacole and Martin Luther King
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  • Mary Seacole: Global Nurse Extraordinaire
    DISCUSSION PAPER Mary Seacole: global nurse extraordinaire Corry Staring-Derks, Jeroen Staring & Elizabeth N. Anionwu Accepted for publication 18 September 2014 Correspondence to E.N. Anionwu: STARING-DERKS C., STARING J. & ANIONWU E.N. (2014) Mary Seacole: glo- e-mail: [email protected] bal nurse extraordinaire. Journal of Advanced Nursing 00(0), 000–000. doi: 10.1111/jan.12559 Corry Staring-Derks MSc Infant Welfare Centre Medical Specialist and Lecturer in Medicine Abstract University of Applied Sciences Avans Aims. A discussion of recently discovered literature that reveals how after the Hogeschool Nursing Departments, Breda Crimean War ended in 1856, Jamaican nurse, doctress and entrepreneur Mary and Den Bosch, The Netherlands Seacole travelled more widely and gained further international recognition than had previously been appreciated. Jeroen Staring PhD Background. New findings demonstrate that Seacole’s international charitable PhD in Medical Sciences, PhD in Pedagogy, and business activities were reported more widely than realised. Recently Independent Researcher discovered literature uncovers her networking and strategic skills in various social Nijmegen, The Netherlands milieus. A former Scutari nurse and 39 other women, offered their service to Elizabeth N. Anionwu PhD RN Seacole to nurse British soldiers in India. Newspapers also reported the medal she Emeritus Professor of Nursing had been awarded from the Turkish government. University of West London, UK Design. Discussion paper. @EAnionwu Data sources. Digitized 19th-century newspaper reports, and 1857 Dutch and 1858 French translations of Seacole’s autobiography and a recently discovered handwritten letter dated 1 October 1857 from Seacole to Sir Henry Storks, at the time Secretary for Military Correspondence at the War Office, London.
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  • Mary Seacole
    An Introduction to: Mary Seacole Mary Seacole (1805-1881), business woman and nurse of the Crimean War gives her name to Seacole House at The John Warner School in Hoddesdon. Seacole House represents the discipline of the social sciences and the school value of respect. Summary of Life Was Mary a Creole, mulatto or quadroon? One of the most significant things about Mary Seacole relates to her race. Attitudes towards non-white members of British society in the nineteenth century were almost wholly negative and any sense of legal equality between different races did not come about until the second half of the twentieth century, one hundred years after Mary died. Mary Jane Grant was born in Kingston, Jamaica (part of the British Empire at the time) in 1805. Her father was a white man from Scotland based in Jamaica with the British army and her mother was a Creole (a person of mixed European and black descent). Legally, Mary was classified as a mulatto (a person born from one white parent and one black parent) but technically speaking she was a quadroon (a person with one bi-racial parent and one white parent). Race would play a significant part in her life and meant she had to overcome prejudice, discrimination and lack of opportunity to achieve her remarkable successes. How did she learn to be a nurse? Mary’s mother ran Blundell Hall, one of the finest hotels (These ‘hotels’ were more like hostels caring for the sick) in Kingston. Mary acquired her nursing skills from her mother and also from doctors stay at the boarding house.
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  • SCIENCE at Work
    SCIENCE at work All about Mary Seacole WHAT DID MARY SEACOLE DO? Mary Seacole was a nurse. She was the daughter of a black Jamaican woman and a white Scottish man. Mary grew up in Jamaica, helping her mother nurse sick and injured people in their boarding house. When she was 15 she travelled to England and learned more about nursing. Over the next few years she worked in a scientific way to discover which medicines were best for treating cholera. She became an expert, saving many people’s lives in Panama and Jamaica. When the Crimean war broke out, Mary asked to be sent there, but was turned away by the war office in London. She was so determined to go that she went anyway, paying for her own travel. With great kindness and skilled nursing, she treated soldiers on the front line, often under fire. The soldiers called her ‘Mother Seacole’. Mary Seacole and Florence Nightingale During the Crimean War, Mary improved conditions for soldiers and saved many of their lives, often in dangerous circumstances. Florence Nightingale also saved many lives, but was in less danger herself. But after the war, Florence became a legendary figure in Picture credit British history, and Mary was forgotten. Until recently hardly anyone had heard of her. When Mary’s application to nurse wounded soldiers in Crimea was rejected, she knew that it was not for lack of experience and good references, but because she was black. She cried in the street and said, “Did these This is the only known photograph of Mary ladies shrink from accepting my aid because Seacole, taken in London in around 1873.
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