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      • She first worked at Boston City Hospital (now a part of the Boston Medical Center), but received very little training. After three months of being overworked, she left.
      notablenurses.com/linda-richards/
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  2. Richards suffered a severe stroke in 1923, and was hospitalized until her death on April 16, 1930. Richards was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 1994. She is mentioned in connection with Mass. General Hospital on the Boston Women's Heritage Trail. [8]

  3. May 16, 2014 · In 1874, The Boston Training School for Nurses started at Massachusetts General Hospital and Linda Richards was approached to become superintendent, initially she refused but was eventually persuaded.

  4. During his service, he was severely wounded, and when he returned home, Richards took care of him until he died in 1869. These two personal losses reawakened Richards’ interest in nursing, and she moved to Boston to fulfill her dream. She worked at Boston City Hospital but received very little training there, and the workload was overwhelming.

  5. Linda Richards suffered a severe stroke in 1923 at age 82, and lived out her life at the New England Hospital for Women and Children where she had received her first training. She died there on April 16, 1930.

  6. Jul 24, 2018 · Established the first nurse training program in Japan in 1885 and supervised the school at the Doshisha Hospital in Kyoto for five years. Her commitment to the education (not the training) of nurses became the foundation for the development of modern nursing education.

  7. After three months of being overworked, she left. In 1872, she became the first pupil enrolled in the first American Nurses’ training school. The institution was headed by Dr. Susan Dimock, and was located at the New England Hospital for Women and Children (now known as the Dimock Center).

  8. Mar 31, 2024 · Delve into the pioneering journey of Linda Richards, an iconic figure in nursing history, and explore her remarkable legacy and unique contributions to the evolution of professional nursing alongside other women medical pioneers.

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