Nora Neve

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Born1867 (1867)
Died1952 (aged 8485)
OthernamesMary Nora Neve, Mary Neve
EducationThe Olives (nursing)
Nora Neve
Born1867 (1867)
Died1952 (aged 8485)
Other namesMary Nora Neve, Mary Neve
EducationThe Olives (nursing)
OccupationsNurse and Medical Missionary
OrganizationChurch Missionary Society
TitleSuperintendent of Nursing at Kashmir Mission Hospital
SuccessorMiss L Wemyss
RelativesArthur Neve, Ernest Neve

Nora Neve (1867-1952)[1] was a British nurse and medical missionary with the Church Missionary Society who pioneered missionary nursing. Her work was instrumental in the development of the Kashmir Mission Hospital in Srinagar.[2] She was the hospital's first Superintendent of Nursing and led education and cleanliness initiatives.[2][3] Neve also recorded and published records of Kashmiri hospital practices in the American Journal of Nursing, contributing to the tool kits of other missionaries and preserving a part of Kashmir's cultural history.[4][5]

Early life and influences

Nora Neve was born in England in 1873.[1] Her family members were devout Christians and members of the Church of England.[6] Two of her uncles, Arthur Neve and Ernest Neve, were medical missionaries in Kashmir by the time she was 11 years old.[1][7] At the young age of 18, Nora traveled to Kashmir to visit her uncles and see the mission hospital where they worked.[3] She decided to join them and the Church Missionary Society (CMS) and a year later, was officially announced as part of the society's ranks in the Church Missionary Gleaner July 1898 edition.[8]

Education

Neve was sent by CMS to The Olives, a training home where they sent women missionary candidates.[9] There, she received her nursing and additional Christian religious education.[10] At the time of her attendance, The Olives was only a 4 year old private training school in the post-Nightingale era, when nursing schools were established in England that focused on providing future nurses practical education, promoting sanitation and cleanliness practices, and on fostering nursing theory and professionalism.[11][12]

Missionary work

Legacy

References

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