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Mary Eliza Mahoney

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Mahoney was listed in the registry of the Boston Medical Library's directory. ... At the 1st annual meeting in Boston Mahoney gave the welcoming address. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mary Eliza Mahoney


1
Mary Eliza Mahoney
  • 1st African American Nurse
  • 1845- 1926

2
Beginnings
  • Born in Boston on May 7, 1845
  • Child of Charles Mary Jane Steward
  • Began school at age 10 (1855)
  • Showed an interest in nursing at the age of 18
    (1863)
  • Mahoney may have attended Phillips Street School
    Boston. (isnt verified)

3
Beginnings Continued
  • No documents say where she lived between birth
    and 1875 when she showed up at her sisters in
    Boston.
  • First two decades of her life were times of
    turmoil and great change.

4
Mid-life
  • Mahoney worked at the New England Hospital for
    Women and Children for 15 years as cook, wash
    woman, janitor, and unofficial nurses assistant.
    (Roxbury, Mass.)
  • While working there she impressed a woman
    physician who encouraged her to apply to nursing
    school.

5
New England Hospital
  • Small in size
  • Created as a direct response to the prejudice
    against woman as full participants in medicine.
  • Founded in 1862.
  • Cared mostly for woman during pregnancy and
    delivery.
  • Boston Fire
  • Nurses gave 25 of their wages toward solving the
    hospitals money crisis.

6
Extended Education
  • 1878 admitted for Nursing Training at the age of
    33 though the age limit was 31.
  • 42 students started the program with only 4
    graduates.
  • The course was 16 hours a day, 7 days a week with
    training in hospital medical and at home care.
  • Graduated Nursing School in August of 1879
  • Each student while in school was in charge of one
    ward. (6 beds)

7
Tuition
  • Mahoney and others didnt pay tuition, they got
    paid.
  • They got 1 per week (1st six months of
    probation), 2 per week (2nd six months of
    probation), and 3 per week (last four months of
    probation)
  • This money was to be used for their uniforms.

8
After school
  • Mahoney traveled to Washington D.C to care for an
    army surgeon, the husband of a friend, who had
    tuberculosis.
  • She also traveled to New Jersey to care for a
    patient who she had cared for when the patient
    was a baby.
  • Private Duty Nursing
  • Charged 15 by week
  • And 2.50 by day

9
Possible Mentors
  • Mrs. Ednah Dow Cheney
  • May have played role in her nursing career
  • Cheney was manager, secretary, and president at
    the New England Hospital

10
Recognition
  • Mahoney was listed in the registry of the Boston
    Medical Librarys directory.
  • Mahoney was chosen by black nurses as an
    inspiration for their quest for inclusion into
    the nursing main stream.

11
National Association of Colored Graduates
  • In 1908 the organization was founded to raise
    standards and combat racial bias in the
    profession.
  • At the 1st annual meeting in Boston Mahoney gave
    the welcoming address.
  • Then, she was elected chaplain.

12
Rough Times
  • When Miss Mahoney signed on with the Boston
    Directory she had to eat in the kitchen alone.
  • As nursing became more popular among society
    racial injustice flared excluding African
    Americans from main stream.

13
Family
  • Mahoney had one brother (Charles) two sisters
    (Ellen, Louise)
  • Ellen attended a nursing school but was
    unsuccessful. And Louise died at an early age.
  • Mahoney was engaged to a physician but it didnt
    work out.
  • Even though she never had a family of her own she
    developed relationships with families she worked
    for and physicians.

14
Later Life
  • Retired from nursing in 1912.
  • Ended her nursing career at an orphanage in New
    York.
  • Mahoney was one of the first women to register to
    vote in 1920.
  • Died on January 4, 1926 of breast cancer. (81
    years old)
  • Buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in Everett, Mass.

15
After Death
  • In 1936, affiliates of NACGN (National Asso. Of
    Colored Graduate Nurses) established an award in
    her name to honor sister nurses.
  • In 1951 NACGN and ANA (American Nurses
    Association) merged and continued the award.

16
After Death Continued
  • In 1976 Mahoney was inducted into the Nursing
    Hall of fame.
  • 1984 Chi Eta Phi ANA organized a national
    pilgrimage to her grave in her honor.

17
Timeline
1863 Mahoney showed interest in Nursing
1878 Mahoney was admitted for Nurse Training
1920 one of 1st woman to vote
1912 Retirement
1866 Mass. 1st state to elect African Americans
to Legislature Positions
1926 Death
1845 Born
1855 African Americans were able to attend school
1908 NACG established
1840 African Americans gained equal voting rights.
18
References
  • American First Black Professional Nurse
  • Journal of Nursing History (1986)
  • Encore American Worldwide News (1978)
  • http//www.bridgew.edu/hoba/mahoney.cfm
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