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In 1910, Florence Nightingale died, leaving behind a transformed profession. But there was a time when nursing wasn't noble—it was shameful work that respectable women avoided entirely. Nurses were recruited from brothels, workhouses, and the desperate underclass. They worked in filthy, overcrowded hospitals where patients were four times more likely to die from infection than anywhere else in London.
Before the 19th century, nursing existed only in the shadows of medieval convents and chaotic urban hospitals. It was seen as menial labor requiring no skill—just extensions of women's domestic duties. During the Industrial Revolution, as diseases like cholera and typhoid ravaged England's growing cities, hospitals became places of last resort. The women who cared for the sick faced violence, contagious illness, and social stigma, all while society looked down on them as morally questionable.
This is Part 1 of our three-part series exploring how nursing evolved from one of society's most despised occupations into one of its most respected professions.
Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American history stories every week. New episodes release Tuesdays. Every hometown has a story—what's yours?
In This Episode:This is Part 1 of a 3-part series on nursing history:
Before Florence Nightingale, nursing was considered work so degrading that it marked you as part of society's underclass. Understanding this transformation reveals how professions gain respect, how gender roles shaped medicine, and why healthcare reform faces such resistance even today.
Note: While this episode focuses on European nursing history rather than a specific American hometown, it sets essential context for understanding how modern American nursing developed—a story we'll continue in Parts 2 and 3.
By Shane Waters4.5
136136 ratings
In 1910, Florence Nightingale died, leaving behind a transformed profession. But there was a time when nursing wasn't noble—it was shameful work that respectable women avoided entirely. Nurses were recruited from brothels, workhouses, and the desperate underclass. They worked in filthy, overcrowded hospitals where patients were four times more likely to die from infection than anywhere else in London.
Before the 19th century, nursing existed only in the shadows of medieval convents and chaotic urban hospitals. It was seen as menial labor requiring no skill—just extensions of women's domestic duties. During the Industrial Revolution, as diseases like cholera and typhoid ravaged England's growing cities, hospitals became places of last resort. The women who cared for the sick faced violence, contagious illness, and social stigma, all while society looked down on them as morally questionable.
This is Part 1 of our three-part series exploring how nursing evolved from one of society's most despised occupations into one of its most respected professions.
Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American history stories every week. New episodes release Tuesdays. Every hometown has a story—what's yours?
In This Episode:This is Part 1 of a 3-part series on nursing history:
Before Florence Nightingale, nursing was considered work so degrading that it marked you as part of society's underclass. Understanding this transformation reveals how professions gain respect, how gender roles shaped medicine, and why healthcare reform faces such resistance even today.
Note: While this episode focuses on European nursing history rather than a specific American hometown, it sets essential context for understanding how modern American nursing developed—a story we'll continue in Parts 2 and 3.

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