Category Archives: Health Care

Sister Francine’s Family Collection

Dating back from the founding of the Province, the Archive contains at least basic information about all the Sisters of the province.  In the 20th and 21st centuries, we usually have a little more information, such as a formal obituary, a few accounts, or newspaper clippings.  Sometimes we even have a few pieces of personal memorabilia about a Sister.  But sometimes, we are fortunate enough that a Sister will donate pieces of her own family history, which illustrates both her pathway to the Sisterhood and brings to life a subject in its own right.

Recently, Sister Francine Brown was kind enough to donate a collection of her family materials to the Archives.  Sister Francine is a second-generation American who has spent most of her ministry with and for persons with intellectual and physical disabilities and their families or as an interpreter.  Her health care background, along with her knowledge and fluency in French stem from her mother and grandmother before her.

Julia Durupt Guérin, Sister’s grandmother, married Alfred Eugène Georges Guérin in 1919, after World War I, in eastern France.  She began her nursing service in 1938 in Paris, on the eve of World War II, after receiving her State nursing certification.  She rose to the rank of supervisor and later Director of the OB Department at La Maternité in Paris.  For her hospital service during the War and the Occupation, she was awarded the Departmental and Municipal Medal of Honor in 1949 for her service at the Lariboisiére.

Julia Durupt Guérin portrait photo, 1946
Her Departmental and Municipal Medal of Honor

As an aside, Sister Francine donated many of her grandfather’s service records, including a diary with artillery sketches, to the World War I Museum in Meaux, France.  The Daughters of Charity Archives does have copies, along with a bullet that he sculpted for his fiancée.  The bullet is not live or active; we checked.

Madeleine Julia Guérin Brown, Sister Francine’s mother, was born in 1923 and followed in her own mother’s footsteps, receiving her State nursing diploma in 1948.  In the same year, she married an American former soldier, Howard Nelson Brown and left France for the United States.  She received her naturalized citizenship in 1952. 

Growing up in the chaos and uncertainty of the War, Madeleine had changed schools several times.  She did not have proof of completing or graduating from high school, and her nursing diploma was not considered reciprocal for receiving her nursing registration in the United States.  This meant that she had to go through the arduous process of receiving letters of practice and good conduct (from oversees to boot) and obtaining a high school equivalence certificate.  All of this in spite of her working in good conduct and standing, to the level that her supervisor called “of superior quality” (this letter is also in the collection).  She at last received her certification as a registered nurse in 1971 for the District of Columbia.

Madeleine’s 1947 nursing school class.  Madeleine is in the top row, 3rd from the right.
Madeleine’s naturalization certificate

In addition to the family history it entails, the collection is a valuable tool for looking at the professionalization of the nursing profession.  The Daughters of Charity, as a French community, have their own parallel history with this subject as they confronted the increased regimen of examinations and certifications, both with the scientific subject of nursing and the waves of secularization in France in the centuries since the Revolution.  They even share a history of having distinctive head coverings!  Yet it also shows the human level that a person will go to fulfill their duty.

This collection, for the time, is available with the permission of Sister Francine (you may contact the Archives about access).  It presents a full background of a Daughter of Charity and her family, the origins of her vocation, and her particular vocation within a religious community with a strong Franco-American history.

Navy blue and white veils with red and blue cockades worn by Madeleine during her nurse’s training (1945-47).  The blue veil was worn over the white veil only when doing public health nursing visits.  The cockades symbolize La Ville de Paris.  Stripe on the cap signifies being a registered (diploma) nurse of France.

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Tenth Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina

On August 25, 2005, Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast, causing widespread destruction and loss of life in the region. New Orleans was hit especially hard. The text below comes from a news story which appeared a few days after the storm.

… As the waters continued to rise in New Orleans, four Navy ships raced toward the Gulf Coast with drinking water and other emergency supplies, and Red Cross workers from across the country converged on the devastated region. The Red Cross reported it had about 40,000 people in 200 shelters across the area in one of the biggest urban disasters the nation has ever seen.

The death toll from Hurricane Katrina reached at least 110 in Mississippi alone, while Louisiana put aside the counting of the dead to concentrate on rescuing the living, many of whom were still trapped on rooftops and in attics.

A full day after the Big Easy thought it had escaped Katrina’s full fury, two levees broke and spilled water into the streets on Tuesday, swamping an estimated 80 percent of the bowl-shaped, below-sea-level city, inundating miles and miles of homes and rendering much of New Orleans uninhabitable for weeks or months.

… Officials said it was simply too early to estimate a death toll. One Mississippi county alone said it had suffered at least 100 deaths, and officials are “very, very worried that this is going to go a lot higher,” said Joe Spraggins, civil defense director for Harrison County, home to Biloxi and Gulfport. In neighboring Jackson County, officials said at least 10 deaths were blamed on the storm.
Several of the dead in Harrison County were from a beachfront apartment building that collapsed under a 25-foot wall of water as Hurricane Katrina slammed the Gulf Coast with 145-mph winds Monday. Louisiana officials said many were feared dead there, too, making Katrina one of the most punishing storms to hit the United States in decades.

[Louisiana Governor Kathleen] Blanco asked residents to spend Wednesday in prayer.
“That would be the best thing to calm our spirits and thank our Lord that we are survivors,” she said. “Slowly, gradually, we will recover; we will survive; we will rebuild.”

The Daughters of Charity have ministered in New Orleans since 1830, serving in school ministry, health care, social work, and parish ministry. Since the storm, the Sisters have returned to New Orleans and taken a leadership role in providing community-based health care through Daughters of Charity Services of New Orleans (DCSNO). DCSNO operates five health centers which provide care for chronic illnesses such as asthma, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and depression. Women’s health, behavioral/mental health, dental, optometry, pharmacy, podiatry and Women, Infants and Children (WIC) services are also available at select health centers. It is a member of Ascension Health, the nation’s largest Catholic and non-profit health care system. DCSNO’s mission is to improve the health and well-being of our community and to be a presence of the Love of Jesus in the lives of all they serve and with whom they partner.

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Nursing Education – Sanders Medical Books

Another important aspect of the Sisters’ work in health care was nursing education. From the 1890s to the 1970s, nursing education was based in hospitals. Many Daughter of Charity hospitals had schools of nursing associated with them. Nursing students would have learned from textbooks such as those featured in the catalog below, from W.B. Sanders Company, West Washington Square, Philadelphia. Based on Worldcat searches for some of the titles, we think the catalog was printed around 1915.

Sanders was a publisher of academic medical books. The company was founded in Philadelphia in 1888 by Walter Burns Sanders. Originally independent, the company was acquired in the 1960s by CBS, where it became part of their publishing division Holt, Rinehart & Winston. When CBS left the publishing field in 1986, it sold the academic publishing units to Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. Harcourt was acquired by Reed Elsevier in 2001.
(Source: Wikipedia)

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