Deming, Dorothy (1893–1972)

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Deming, Dorothy (1893–1972)

American nurse and children's writer. Born Dorothy Deming, June 8, 1893, in New Haven, Connecticut; died Jan 1972 in Winter Park, Florida; dau. of Clarence and Mary Bryan (Whiting) Deming; Vassar College, BA, 1914; attended Yale University; graduate of New York City's Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing, 1920; studied at Henry Street Visiting Nurse Association.

Elected director of Holyoke Visiting Nurse Association (1924); hired as assistant to director of National Organization for Public Health Nursing (NOPHN, 1927); served as assistant to editor, director general and journal editor of Public Health Nursing (1935–42); joined American Public Health Association (1942–52); published the highly successful Penny Marsh: Public Health Nurse (1938) and its sequels, which were so popular that high schools created Penny Marsh Clubs for girls who wanted to become nurses; wrote at least 20 fictional novels.

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Deming, Dorothy (1893–1972)

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