Nora Neve
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Nora Neve | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1867 |
| Died | 1952 (aged 84–85) |
| Other names | Mary Nora Neve, Mary Neve |
| Education | The Olives (nursing) |
| Occupations | Nurse and Medical Missionary |
| Organization | Church Missionary Society |
| Title | Superintendent of Nursing at Kashmir Mission Hospital |
| Successor | Miss L Wemyss |
| Relatives | Arthur 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]

