Saturday, 4 July 2020

Mary Elizabeth Gladwin (1861 – 1939) - a British-born American Red Cross nurse who served in three wars.

 She was one of the first six American nurses to receive the Florence Nightingale Medal when it was awarded by the International Committee of the Red Cross in 1920.

Mary Elizabeth Gladwin was born on 24th December 1861 in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, UK, the daughter of Francis Gladwin and Sarah Gladwin, nee Cooper. The family moved to the United States, settling in Akron, Ohio. Mary graduated from Buchtel College in 1887 (now The University of Akron) and trained as a nurse in Boston, finally completing her formal studies in 1902.

Mary became a science teacher in Norwalk, Ohio after finishing college. Her first work as a war nurse was while she was still a nursing student, during the Spanish–American War in 1898, treating soldiers with typhoid fever in Chickamauga, Georgia. She was soon included in American Red Cross units assigned to Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines as well. She was awarded a Spanish War Service Medal for her service. During the Russo-Japanese War, Mary joined an American Red Cross unit, assisting Japanese nurses at Hiroshima. The Japanese emperor personally presented Gladwin with the Imperial Order of the Crown.

Superintendent at Beverly Hospital in Massachusetts from 1904 to 1907 and at the Women's Hospital in New York City from 1907 to 1913, back home in Ohio Mary worked with the Red Cross during the Great Dayton Flood of 1913.  She was head of women's employment at the B. F. Goodrich Tyre Company in Ohio, and was superintendent at the City Hospital in Cleveland. She was also president of the Ohio State Nurses Association and chaired the National Committee on Red Cross Nursing in 1911.

During the First World War, Mary went to Serbia with the American Red Cross to work at a hospital in Belgrade and later iwent to work in Salonika in Greece. She received the Serbian Cross of Charity medal for her service there.  In 1920, Mary was one of the first six American nurses to receive the Florence Nightingale Medal from the International Committee of the Red Cross.

After the war, Mary worked as a hospital administrator and nursing instructor in New York and Minnesota. She wrote two books, Ethics: Talks to Nurses (1930) and a biography of Jane Delano (1931), as well as articles for the American Journal of Nursing. She was also a frequent speaker for students and women's groups, especially after 1929. "If the fathers and mothers could have seen what I have seen on the bloody battlefields," she said, "there never would be another war."

Mary died on 22nd November 1939 at Akron City Hospital, aged 77 years. In 1978, the new building for the School of Nursing at Akron University was named Mary E. Gladwin Hall. Her papers, including diary, photographs, and an unpublished memoir, are archived at the University of Akron, but her medals were donated to the Summit County Historical Society.

Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anita_Newcomb_McGee
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_E._Gladwin