Sutliffe, Irene H. (1850–1936)

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Sutliffe, Irene H. (1850–1936)

American nurse. Born Nov 12, 1850, in Albany, NY; died Dec 10, 1936; dau. of Charlotte (Ramsey) Sutliffe and George Washington Sutliffe; graduate of New York Hospital School of Nursing, 1880.

Noted nursing education administrator who taught some of the most famous nurses of the early 1900s, Lillian Wald, Annie Goodrich and Mary Beard, 1st established an Erie (PA) school of nursing at the Hamot Hospital, and the Long Island Hospital School of Nursing in Brooklyn, NY (c. 1886); served as director of New York Hospital School of Nursing (1886–1902) and became dean emerita (1932); organized and directed an emergency hospital in response to a polio outbreak in NY (1916); presented a paper at the Conference of Charities, Correction, and Philanthropy at the World's Fair, Chicago (1893), which led to the creation of the National League for Nursing.

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Sutliffe, Irene H. (1850–1936)

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