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In today’s world, nursing is a very popular field of study and a career as a nurse is becoming more and more demanding. However, it took decades for the career to actually gain some sort of credit and recognition. It wasn’t until the 19th century that nursing was truly valued, when many remarkable individuals, mostly [...]
Posted by Ash Grant on Wednesday, August 18, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, People · Tagged American Birth Control League, American Red Cross, Army Medical College, Army School of Nursing, Berkendael Medical Institute, bi-racial, British Hospital, British Hospital for Mothers and Babies, catholic church, certified midwife, Clara Barton, Dorothea Dix, Dorothea Dix Hospital, Edith Cavell, Florence Nightingale, Frontier Nursing Service, Health, Helen Fairchild, History, Hospital Training School, huge advocate for cleaning and fixing up hospitals, Jamaican women, Margaret Sanger, Mary Breckinridge, Mary Eliza Mahoney, Mary Mahoney, Mary Seacole, Medicine, Midwifery, Military Service for America Memorial, National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses, New England Hospital, New England Hospital for Women and Children, North Carolina State Medical Society, nurse, Nurses Associated Alumnae, Nursing, Pennsylvania Hospital, private duty nurse, Red Cross, St. Luke’s Hospital Training School, Teachers College of Columbia University, top 10 lists, top 10 nurses, top 10 women, top nurses, TopTenz, Virginia Avenel Henderson, Virginia Henderson, Yale School of Nursing
Before the outbreak of World War I, Adolf Hitler was a practicing artist. On two separate occasions, Hitler was denied admission to the Academy for Art Studies in Vienna. He took art very seriously and during his 12-year reign as German Führer, the international art industry was demolished. It has been estimated that Hitler stole [...]
Posted by Bryan Johnson on Monday, July 5, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Art, History · Tagged Academy for Art Studies in Vienna, Adele Block-Bauer, adolf hitler, Alexander Archipenko, Amber Room Organization, Andreas Schlüter, Anton van Leeuwenhoek, Art, Astronomer, Baltic Sea, Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, Catherine Palace, claude monet, degenerate artist, designer, E.G. Bührle, Edgar Degas, Édouard Manet, Emil Georg Bührle, Erich Koch, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Esteban Murillo, Francis Bacon, Gottfried Wolfram, Henri Matisse, Henry Hatt, Hermitage Museum, Hidden Treasures Revealed, Impressionism, Jesus Christ, Johannes Vermeer, Kaiser-Friedrich Museum, King of Prussia, Meadows Museum, Mona Lisa, Monuments Men, Napoleon, Nazi army, Nazi Germany, nazis, Nuremberg Castle, Pablo Picasso, painter, Paris, Paul Cézanne, Paul Gauguin, Peter's Basilica, Pforzheim, Red Army in Germany, Red Cross, Royal Air Force, Saint Justa, Saint Petersburg, Saint Rufina, Saito, sculpture, Siegfried Kramarsky, St. Mary's Church, stolen art, Städel museum, the Hermitage, van gogh, Vatican City, Veit Stoss, Vincent van Gogh, Wolfgang Flöttl, wood sculptor