Collecting Nursing Relics

Nurses General Nursing

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When Jerri Rich, RN, settles into the office of her Sterling Heights, Mich., home to prepare to teach a first-aid or CPR class, she does so against the backdrop of nursing history. The office is a showcase for a growing collection of "nurse things."

Collecting began with regrets of an opportunity lost. Years ago, in an Army surplus-type store, Rich said, "There was an old nurse's uniform that had the blue cape and everything from World War II. After I left, I just couldn't stop thinking about it."

The store went out of business soon after she passed up the vintage uniform and efforts since to find it have come up short. She envisions it on a mannequin in her office, a fashion statement among nursing and medical artifacts that--by her own estimate--represents a few thousand of her dollars.

"I started off with old books. I've got one book from the 1700s" and several from the 1800s, Rich said. "One of the really old ones, it does say, for example, that diabetes is characterized by sweet urine and is always fatal. So that was before insulin."

Rich, 45, said she most cherishes a book dated 1898 that belonged to her grandmother. It's an anecdotal compilation of patients' symptoms. In reading what the patients said, "I would try to figure out what was really wrong with them," she said.

The enthusiasm Rich carries from antique store to secondhand shop in search of history is matched by a love of education, both as a student and as an instructor.

After earning her high school diploma in an adult education program, she graduated from Oakland (Mich.) Community College's LPN program in 1982. "I knew right then that's not where I could stop," she said.

She earned her RN credentials at Macomb Community College and is within a class or two of a bachelor's degree in health services at Oakland University in Rochester, Mich. She developed a nurses aide training program for local public schools and since 1995 has operated a small business, in which she teaches first aid and CPR certification classes to businesspeople, day care workers and dental staffs, among others.

"I've always made it a point of reading or being in school or working in different areas in a hospital just to get that experience," said Rich, who works as a cardiac nurse for an agency. "I can pretty much drop in and out of places and feel comfortable doing whatever they need."

One piece of her memorabilia comes from St. John Hospital and Medical Center, part of a multifacility health care system in Detroit, where Rich spent 15 years as an ER nurse. "I found one of their old cups from the '50s, where they used to serve coffee on the trays," she said. "It had the little St. John logo on it. I thought that was kind of cute."

Logos provide clues to the origin and era of other items. For example, a porcelain pediatric bedpan marked 1812 is among Rich's favorite pieces.

"About 10 years ago I was traveling, doing some reviews for the state of Michigan for their nurse training programs and I went all over Michigan," she said. In the southern part of the state, two or three antique stores yielded old bedpans, old urinals and an alcohol burner once used to sterilize equipment.

"Then I got people looking for stuff," Rich said. "A friend of mine gave me a set of scalpels from a World War II ship. Then a friend of my husband gave me an old syringe, an antique glass syringe, which is totally fascinating. I'm not antique, but I got shots with those as a kid."

Glass is a large part of the predisposable world of nursing and Rich's collection. "I have an old breast pump that's glass," she said. "I'd never seen one of those. I'm sure it's from the '50s."

Her display cases also hold antique medical bottles. "One of them says 'For human flesh only,' " the words formed in the clear glass of the specimen bottle, Rich said. Another has the word "urine" formed in the glass and a pediatric medicine bottle is impregnated with the figure of a giraffe.

Rich, who entered the profession in the era of nursing caps (and still has hers), said a complete vintage uniform remains a goal, as well as her latest quest for old nursing school pins worn on lapels. "I'll keep looking," she said.

Specializes in midwifery, ophthalmics, general practice.

I have my grandmothers nursing text books- she was a nurse in the 1930s', plus I have a silver buckle for my belt that was my mums! its now 70yrs old and I wear it every day!

my grans books make interesting reading!

Karen

I have my Mom's books from nursing school, her student and graduate pins and some caps. For reasons she never explained, she gave her cape to one of her nieces, who turned it into coats for her two sons. That's always made me a bit sad. I can remember when I was in school going to my Mom's OB book for a description of destructive obstetrics which my book referred to but didn't explain. It was also a great source for exercises to do to relieve gas pains after abdominal surgery.

Specializes in Cardiac Care.

When I graduated from nursing school my Grandmother gave me the cap that she wore 70 years earlier when she was a nurse. I have that along with her nursing books and pictures of her and her collegues in training. They meant so much to her that she's kept them all these years, they certainly mean a lot to me too!

Heather

I have a few historic things R/T nursing, but not as much as I would like. My Grandma gave me an old nursing book she found at a yard sale. I got a couple of ones off of Ebay. They have some nursing pins on there, but usually the prices are out of my range for this time in my life. I would love to have one of those capes though. I think they are gorgeous. I have seen a couple go up for auction on Ebay. Anyone know of any other online sites that has antique nursing items on it? Or where to find some stores in real life? Thanks.

deespoohbear, you can occasionally find pins at flea markets and gold/coin dealers. Last year I found four at a flea market and none were over $60. As for the capes, you can sometimes find them at vintage clothing dealers. I think that if some manufacturer decided to make them again, they'd find a worthwhile market for them. Enough people seem to want them. I know that Ebay is a very discouraging way to go for these things. It took me about thirty years to collect forty pins, and most of those before Ebay came on the scene.

I've got an original book "surgery for nurses" written by no one else as Dr. Billroth himself!

My mother was a WWII army nurse, and I have many of her things, including her first RN pin, many pictures, and many, many of her touching stories. I also have an old Critical Care book from the early 1960s (rotating tourniquets, anyone?).

Specializes in Geriatrics, LTC.

Oh these all sound great, I would love to find an old nursing book. I once read online some old nursing job duties...it was a riot, they had to work like 6 days a week, and had to shovel coal and just some really strange things.

Hadda smile...I was showing a girlfriend Allnurses on her PC (she is not computer savvy) and when we saw this thread we laughed and said at the same time "We ARE Nursing relics". :)

I have a copy of "DeLee's Obstetrics & Gynecology For Nurses" date 1928. I bought it on eBay, along with another dozen old nursing texts, for $3.00.

I found a celluloid negative stuck between the pages, a negative from what must have been a photograph of the former owner. It shows a very young woman, maybe 20, standing in a student nurse uniform (pinafore, striped dress, white collar, white cap) outside a brick building, holding an infant. I'm thinking it might have been one of her first deliveries; notes inside the back cover of the book give the date and time of births she witnessed.

She looks so proud. It's unfortunate that her family parted with this piece of her history.

Since then, I've purchased other "nursing relics", including an interesting text from 1903 illustrating "common" infectious diseases--smallpox, typhoid fever, etc. I also have my great-grandmother's nursing school pin, her WWI nurse's habit (like what nuns wear!), and her nurse's fob watch. Likewise, I have my grandmother's nursing school pin, several caps, and her WWII nursing cape and medals, as well as her logbook from nursing school clinicals.

The most amazing thing to me is the logbook entries...some of the "lying-in" patients stayed for a month or more in the hospital. Also sad notations, like anecephalic births and stillbirths, and several intrapartum maternal deaths.

I became interested in antiques when I started attending auctions after moving to NC. At one auction I bid on a box of books, and at the bottom was a Medical Student's Vade Mecum from 1867. I occasionally read through it and am amazed at how much they already knew back then, and I am amused and sometimes shocked by the treatments that were used. Bloodletting was frequently used, and they used herbal mixes for medicinal treatments. Very interesting.

I also recently read Tending Lives by Echo Heron, which is a compilation of nursing stories. The ones by the older retired nurses were just amazing, to hear of what they did back then. There was a description from a nurse that was in Hawaii during the attack on Pearl Harbor, and one from a 70 y/o retired L&D nurse. Lots of amazing stories, also by the younger nurses too.

It has really gotten me interested in the history of nursing, and since I started my spring break yesterday, I plan on going to the book store to see what else I can find to read on what nursing was like "back in the day". It almost seems like a different profession from what I see today.

Great thread Bonnie!

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