But as her brazen spirit meets historical reality, Mary’s world explodes, splitting, multiplying, and redefining her narrative.

© 2020 TimeLine Theatre. Past and Present Display Lettering - Transport Title page. 1894: Nightingale begins work on nurse training for Italy; publishes revised articles in Quain, 1895: Nightingale writes fundraising letter for St Thomas’ Hospital; works with new medical instructor at St Thomas’ training school; begins work on trained nursing in Boston; works on nursing for Bolton Workhouse Infirmary, 1896: Nightingale works on nurse training for Finland; circulates information on Finnish aseptic procedures; advises on telephones and bells at St Thomas’; works on trained nursing for Irish workhouses and for Calcutta; mentors matron of City of Dublin Hospital; publishes letter on district nursing, 1897: Nightingale works on nursing at London Hospital; assists matron at Edinburgh under investigation; advises nurses departing for Hong Kong and India, 1898: Nightingale tries to establish district nursing in Canada; does last work on health visitors; holds last meetings with St Thomas’ nurses; makes last notes on antiseptic procedures, 1899: Nightingale meets with matron of a New York hospital; meets with nursing leaders from Canada, U.S. and New Zealand, 1900: Nightingale holds last meetings with matrons of St Marylebone Workhouse Infirmary and London Hospital; advises on nursing for Boer War; sends last ‘address’ (of fourteen) to nurses, 1901: Nightingale sends public letter on district nursing; Census entry: ‘living on own means’, 1902: Nightingale holds last meeting with matron of St Thomas’ Hospital, 1903: Nightingale sends letter on district nursing to Australia, 1904: Has last meeting with a Kaiserswerth deaconess; sends last greetings to Australian nurses, 1905: Nightingale sends last letter to nurses at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, 1906: Nightingale meets with a midwife from Canada, 1907: King confers Order of Merit on Nightingale; International Red Cross meeting recognizes her influence, 1908: Nightingale sends last greetings to nurses and last survivors of the charge of the Light Brigade; City of London confers Freedom of City on Nightingale, 1909: holds last meeting with former matron Angelique-Lucille Pringle, 1910: new building of Hospital for Gentlewomen opens; first Italian training school based on Nightingale principles opens in Rome. This timeline activity helps children understand about the life of Mary Seacole.

Mary Jane Grant was born in Kingston, Jamaica. (X)html |

1881 At the age of 76 Mary Seacole died. Featuring Janet Ulrich Brooks, Wydetta Carter, Sydney Charles, Laura T. Fisher, Nicole Michelle Haskins, and Kayla Raelle Holder. Based on the life of the famous nurse and entrepreneur, Marys Seacole is an examination of what it means to be a woman paid to care. '”, “We celebrate the past to awaken the future.”, “The more I see of Chicago’s TimeLine Theatre Company, the more impressed I am ... TimeLine takes care to choose interesting plays, then mounts them with a combination of panache and physical dynamism that I find altogether irresistible.”, — Terry Teachout, The Wall Street Journal, “A combination of panache and physical dynamism that I find altogether irresistible.”. KS1 History Knowledge Organiser: Nurturing Nurses - Past and Present Display Lettering .

Her father was Scottish and her mother. She was buried in St Mary’s Roman Catholic Cemetery, Harrow Road, Kensal Green, London.

Mary's Timeline. They only met for about 5 minutes (during the Crimean War) and played very different roles in it. KS2 Mary Seacole Timeline - (1 review) KS1 History Knowledge Organiser: Nurturing Nurses.

As she travels across oceans and centuries, through a Jamaican hospital, a Crimean battlefront, a contemporary nursing home, and everywhere in between, Mary moves through life with Herculean fortitude.

1836 - married Edwin Horatio Hamilton Seacole, godson of … All Rights Reserved. This Timeline on Mary Seacole and Florence Nightingale has been prepared especially for teachers.

1873: carte de visite printed, with photograph of Seacole wearing three medals, Maull & Co. 1873: Nightingale works on St Thomas’ curriculum and library for nurses; publishes ‘Life or Death in India’; three American nurse training schools open based on Nightingale principles, 1874: Nightingale begins work to send nurses to Montreal; works on establishing district nursing agency, 1875: Nightingale works on army nursing; meets with nurses for Montreal; works on district nursing in Liverpool, 1876: Nightingale begins mentoring matron of St Mary’s Hospital, Paddington; Nightingale Fund begins supporting district nurse training, 1877: Nightingale mentors matron at Addenbrooke’s, Cambridge; works on extending district nursing; publishes ‘The Indian Famine’, 1878: Nightingale works on nurses for: Lincoln Infirmary, St Bart’s (London), Herbert Hospital, Belfast and Kent; publishes ‘The People of India’, 1879: Nightingale gets inquiry started on abuses in nursing at Buxton Hospital; advises on nursing in Austria; works on sending nurses to Anglo-Zulu War; publishes ‘Woman Slavery in Natal,’ in, 1880: Nightingale mentors Manchester matron; advises on army nursing in Southern Africa, workhouse infirmary nursing and district nursing, Apr 1881: Census entry, Seacole living in St Marylebone, occupation ‘independent’, 1881: Census entry: ‘director of Nightingale Fund for training hospital nurses’; advises on Metropolitan and National Nursing Association, 1882: Nightingale works on nursing in Westminster Hospital, London, on nursing in India; organizes nurses for Egyptian Campaign, 1883: Nightingale works on cholera in Egypt; nursing at Netley; plans for Nurses’ Home, St Marylebone Workhouse Infirmary, 1884: Nightingale works on nurse training for Berlin; assists matron under investigation at St Mary’s; Nurses’ Home at St Marylebone Workhouse Infirmary opens, 1885: Nightingale works on nursing for new Egyptian Campaign and for Belfast Children’s Hospital and Union Infirmary, Belfast.

1890: appointment of new matron at St Thomas’; Nightingale writes introduction to Rathbone, 1891: Nightingale meets with Indian delegates to hygiene congress; publishes ‘Sanitation in India’; Census entry: ‘director of Nightingale Fund Training School for Nurses’, 1892: Nightingale works on district nursing in England and Scotland; mentors matron for Consumption Hospital; works on midwifery nursing; publishes ‘The Reform of Sick Nursing and the Late Mrs Wardroper’ in, 1893: Nightingale meets with American nursing leaders Isabel Hampton and Louise Darche; assists matron Flora Masson under investigation at Radcliffe Infirmary. Mary wrote and published a book called “Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands”. Template by CMSimple_XH | Powered by CMSimple |

Welcome to our website on Mary Seacole. Mary Jane Seacole (née Grant; 23 November 1805 – 14 May 1881) was a British-Jamaican nurse, healer and businesswoman who set up the "British Hotel" behind the lines during the Crimean War. This Timeline can serve as a checklist against unreliable sources. 1805. Login, Florence Nightingale and Mary Seacole Timeline, Seacole’s Wonderful Adventures of Mrs Seacole in Many Lands, 1820s: Seacole makes two visits to England; on second sells Jamaican pickles and preserves, 1836: Marries Edwin Seacole; together run store in Black River; ‘nurses’ him and patroness in dying days, no specifics given, 1837: Nightingale called to service, wants to nurse, family does not allow her, 1843: Seacole's mother’s boarding house destroyed by fire, rebuilt, 1840s: Nightingale visits workhouse infirmaries which ‘broke the visitor’s heart’, 1850: Seacole travels to Panama; supervises food/ clothing production for sale at brother’s hotel/store; opens own store/restaurant; cholera epidemic but no doctor--she treats patients, claims some cures, uses lead acetate, 1850: Nightingale's first visit to Kaiserswerth Deaconess Institution, Germany, 1851: Nightingale nurses three months at Kaiserswerth, 1852: Seeks hospital experience in Dublin but hospital closed for renovations, 1853: Seacole in Jamaica; helps in yellow fever epidemic, no cure available; cares for dying grandmother at her home, 1853: Nightingale nurses three months in Paris hospitals, 1854: Seacole returns to Panama, invests in gold mine, prospects; in September leaves for London to attend to gold stocks, unsuccessful, 21 Oct 1854: Nightingale leaves for Crimean War with 38 nurses, Jan/Feb 1855: serious overcrowding at Scutari Barrack Hospital and rising death rates ; new hospitals opened, Apr 1856: troops/officers depart for England on signing of peace treaty 30 Mar; Seacole's business fails, Mar-May 1856: Nightingale makes third visit to Crimea; establishes nursing at Land Transport Corps hospital; in Apr made superintendent of all Crimean hospital nursing, 17 Jan 1857: bankruptcy certificate granted for Seacole and Day; Early Jul: Seacole publishes, 1857: Nightingale works on own reports and evidence to Royal Commission on the war; advises on nursing in the Royal Navy, 1858: Seacole takes ship to Antwerp (purpose of trip not known); French translation of, 1858: Nightingale publishes 'Notes on the Health of the British Army, Subsidiary Notes [on] the Introduction of Female Nursing into Military Hospitals'; sends first papers on hospital reform to the National Association for the Promotion of Science, 1859: Henry Weekes makes sculpture of Seacole wearing medals (now at Getty Centre, Los Angeles), Jan 1860: Nightingale publishes 'Notes on Nursing: What It Is, and What It Is Not', 1861: Nightingale Ward and midwifery training open at King’s College, London; Nightingale starts work on trained nursing at Royal Victoria Hospital, Netley; publishes 'Notes on Nursing for the Labouring Classes'; sends advice on nursing/hospitals to U.S. government for Civil War; starts research on health conditions in India; Census entry: ‘formerly hospital matron’, 1862: Nightingale liaises on nursing in Baden; works on India royal commission; advises on British Army hospitals, 1863: Nightingale gives evidence to Royal Commission on India; publishes 'How People May Live and Not Die in India', 1864: Nightingale starts work on workhouse infirmary reforms; articulates principle of quality hospital care regardless of ability to pay; advises British delegation to Geneva Convention, Oct 1865: Seacole returns to England from Jamaica.

Mother was a free Black Jamaican, father was a Scottish army officer.

This Timeline on Mary Seacole and Florence Nightingale has been prepared especially for teachers. It was 200 pages long and cost one shilling and sixpence. We hope you enjoy our website.

1865: first trained nursing at a workhouse begins at Liverpool; publishes ‘Suggestions for a System of Nursing for Hospitals in India’; Nightingale contributes introduction to Rathbone, Aug 1866: Seacole donates 100 bottles of anti-cholera medicine and 100 boxes of pills to Lord Mayor’s Cholera Fund (ingredients unknown), 1866: Nightingale starts work on nurses for Australia; extends workhouse nursing to London; advises on trained nursing in India, Jan 1867: fundraising begins, which supports Seacole for the rest of her life, 1867: Nightingale writes brief for Parliamentary committee on establishing nursing in Workhouse Infirmaries in London, 1868: Nightingale nurses begin work in Sydney, Australia; Nightingale publishes ‘Una and the Lion’ on death of Agnes Jones of Liverpool Workhouse Infirmary; first work on trained nurses for St Pancras Workhouse Infirmary Hospital, 1869: Challen paints portrait of Seacole wearing three medals (now at National Portrait Gallery, London), 1869: Nightingale works on nurses’ housing at Netley; works on Liverpool Workhouse nursing; analyzes data on maternal mortality at King’s College, 1870: Nightingale sends public letters to workhouse nurses; works on relief assistance for Franco-Prussian War; letter on cholera published in, Apr 1871: Census entry, Seacole living in Paddington, London, occupation ‘annuitant’, 1871: Nightingale census entry: ‘director of Nightingale nurses’; move of Nightingale School to new St Thomas’ Hospital; training school at St Pancras Workhouse Infirmary begins; publishes 'Introductory Notes on Lying-in Institutions'; awarded Bronze Cross of French aid society, 1872: Nightingale's first ‘address’ to nurses and probationers; advises on lectures for nurses at St Thomas’; trained nursing begins at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary.