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  1. The inscription on the reverse side read, “To Miss Florence Nightingale as a mark of esteem and gratitude for her devotion toward the queen’s brave soldiers from Victoria R. 1855.”

  2. May 11, 2020 · At the age of 16, Florence experienced a call from God into his service. Although initially unsure what form that would take, this belief in her vocation eventually led her to nursing. When Florence expressed her desire to become a nurse, however, her family was horrified.

  3. When Agnes Jones died in 1868, Miss Nightingale broke through her retirement in an article in a monthly magazine, called “Una and her Lions,” a sketch, indeed, of her friend’s taming the paupers, but far more is it a portrait of Florence Nightingale by herself.

  4. Nov 14, 2015 · Florence Nightingale had passion and dedication to the profession of nursing and caring for the wounded soldiers she changed the perception about this much needed profession. She was called “the lady with the lamp.”

  5. May 12, 2017 · He is reported to have written: 'In any matter of nursing Miss Nightingale is my Pope and I believe in her infallibility.' From an upper class family, she defied their expectations when she did not marry, and decided to spend her life in service and ministry to the sick and poor.

  6. Florence Nightingale was a theological liberal rather than a religious sceptic for three reasons. First, she had clear, unwavering, lifelong religious convictions, notably regarding the existence of a good, perfect, Almighty God and the reality of a future life after death.

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  8. Aug 4, 2020 · It was Miss Nightingale, who, ending a day of untiring activity, would take a last look to ascertain whether any duty had been neglected, any urgent case forgotten, any solace unadministered’; ‘there has indeed rarely been such an example of heroic daring combined with feminine gentleness’ (George Dodd, Pictorial History of the Russian ...

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