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  2. Between 1952 and 1975, she was Professor and Head of the Division of Nursing at New York University; she became Professor Emeritus in 1979. Death. Rogers died March 13, 1994, and was buried in Knoxville, Tennessee. In 1996, she was posthumously inducted into the American Nurses Association's Hall of Fame. Nursing theory

  3. Apr 30, 2024 · Martha Rogers was honored with numerous awards and citations for her sustained contributions to nursing and science. In 1996, she was posthumously inducted into the American Nurses Association’s Hall of Fame. Death. Martha Rogers died on March 13, 1994, and was buried in Knoxville, Tennessee.

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  4. Mar 18, 1994 · Dr. Martha E. Rogers, a nursing administrator at New York University for 20 years who helped establish nursing as a profession with responsibilities apart from traditional medical care, died on...

  5. MARTHA E. ROGERS. 1914 - 1994. Gravesite of Martha Rogers in Knoxville, TN. Photo by Martha Alligood. Martha Elizabeth Rogers was born in Dallax Texas on May 12, 1914, the oldest of four children in a family which strongly valued education.

  6. Her Master’s degree was from Teachers College at Columbia University in 1945, and her Doctorate in Nursing was earned at from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore in 1954. Rogers died on March 13, 1994.

  7. The purpose of this inquiry is to document the self-described events across the life span of Martha E. Rogers that she perceived as having influenced the development of the science of unitary human beings. A life history approach is utilized and the data are organized chronologically.

  8. Martha Rogers, one of the most revered of 20th century nursing educators, became Professor and Head of the Division of Nursing at New York University in 1954 providing a generation of doctoral nursing candidates with a theoretical foundation for their profession.

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