Dr. Sarah Garland Boyd Jones established the Richmond Hospital Training School for Colored Nurses between 1896 and 1905, where she formally trained over 60 Black women in rigorous nursing education through structured lectures and assessments documented in the Journal of the National Medical Association; these women then served Black communities across Virginia that were denied healthcare by white institutions, creating a professional pipeline that shaped Black healthcare in the state during the Jim Crow era.
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Dr. Sarah Garland Boyd Jones: The Physician Richmond Tried to Erase (1863-1905)本站添加:
Dr. Sarah Garland Boyd Jones built a pipeline for black nurses. Between 1896 and 1905, she trained over 60 women at Richmond Hospital Training School for colored nurses. Her programs were formal and rigorous.
Records in the Journal of the National Medical Association show structured lectures and assessment. 60 trained women left to serve communities denied care by white institutions.
Each woman provided care where it was needed most. Her work is documented in medical journals. Those records prove this effort was organized and professional. Her legacy shaped black health care in Virginia.
Follow History Unveiled VA to learn more hidden stories from the state.
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