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Trailblazers, Yesterday & Today: Alice Fisher and Jean C. Whelan, PhD., R.N.

April 24, 2014

This month, Trailblazers profiles the work of two incredible females in medicine: Alice Fisher and Jean C. Whelan, PhD, RN. Alice Fisher now resides in Lot 360 of Section N of The Woodlands. Jean Whelan, her contemporary counterpart, works only a few blocks away at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing.

 Alice Fisher (1839–1888). 

 Alice Fisher (1839–1888). 

Alice Fisher was a nurse who was born in England and moved to Philadelphia in 1884 to found the School of Nursing at the Blockley Almshouse and Hospital. As a young woman she studied at the Nightingale Training School at St. Thomas Hospital in England and then served in several British hospitals before her move to the United States. Once in Philadelphia she undertook the reform of Blockley Almshouse, which later became Philadelphia General Hospital [PGH], and is now part of the University of Pennsylvania medical campus. Blockley was the first institution built on land sold  from the Hamilton estate, and Fisher established a School of Nursing there to combat the unhealthy, disorderly conditions of the hospital. In the four short years that Fisher worked at Blockley, she transformed the hospital and established a new generation of nurses to care for Philadelphia's citizens. Fisher's legacy continues through the School of Nursing at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1991 Penn's Center for the Study of the History of Nursing installed a memorial to Fisher on her grave.

We asked Jean to tell us more about her work and how Fisher's pioneering work in the field of nursing has influenced her career.

Jean C. Whelan, PhD, RN

Jean C. Whelan, PhD, RN

What is your current position?
I am currently the Assistant Director of the Barbara Bates Center for the Study of the History of Nursing and an Adjunct Associate Professor of Nursing at the University Of Pennsylvania School of Nursing.

How did you get to where you are today?
I have been a nurse for 44 years. Most of clinical experience was as a staff nurse, Assistant Head Nurse and later as a clinical supervisory nurse at a large municipal hospital in New York City. I also worked as a public health nurse and as a visiting nurse for a time. I moved to Philadelphia in 1976 where I began working in nursing education at several schools of nursing in the area. This provided me with an opportunity to blend my clinical experience with education in preparing future nurses, an activity I loved. Throughout this period, I also continued my own education, earning a masters’ degree and later a PhD in nursing history. Today I work in a position at the Bates Center which combines my research in and knowledge of nursing history with administrative skills. As part of my job, I run programs sponsored by the Bates Center which bring nursing history to both scholarly and public audiences. 

How has the work of Alice Fisher influenced you in your profession? 
In one sense I feel a kinship with Fisher and with her work in a tax-supported municipal institution. When I was a student, my clinical experiences were at Bellevue Hospital in New York, an institution very similar to PGH. After graduation I spent several years working in another municipal hospital. I like to think that the time I spent delivering care to a population of mainly medical indigent patients and the way it shaped my approach to nursing has similarities to Fisher’s commitment to health care.

Further, my main area of research focuses on the historical underpinnings of nurses work, in which I look at how the conventions of nurses’ work were established, what types of work activities early nurses did and how we have supplied nurses to the sick public over time. Alice Fisher was an early pioneer in establishing the nursing profession in the US. When I think of Fisher’s impact on the profession I am very impressed with how she came from England, created a school of nursing with very limited resources and influenced the trajectory of nursing education in a remarkable short period of time. One of the significant lessons that can be extracted from looking at Fisher’s life and work is that you can make a tremendous impact on society if you are smart, focused and persistent. She was also quite charismatic and very savoy in figuring out who could be of great help to her as she set up the PGH School and nursing service. I would be very happy if I could figure out how to channel her charisma and savviness!

What is your favorite part of Fisher’s work or legacy?
Fisher came to this country to work in a tax supported institution, PGH, which provided services to the poorest of society. In the 19th century the patients of PGH, who were often referred to as “inmates” did not garner tremendous sympathy and care from those better off. Yet, Fisher revolutionized the care provided to those patients and at the same time effectively created a school and nursing service of high professional standards. That she was able to combine care of the poorest members in society with advancing the education of nurses is commendable. 

If you could ask her one question today, what would it be?
How did you ever accomplish so much in such a short period of time and earn a reputation for being such a wonderful, pleasant, caring person?


You can rediscover the biographies of our permanent residents everyday. Visit The Woodlands anytime of the year--the gates are open from dawn 'til dusk!

Tags Alice Fisher, Trailblazers, Jean C. Whelan, Nursing, Woodlands Cemetery, Pennsylvania General Hospital, The Woodlands, Philadelphia, West Philadelphia
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Trailblazers, Yesterday & Today: Delores Inez Pollard Carter & Louis H. Carter

February 27, 2014

In a cemetery where more than 30,000 souls have been laid to rest over almost two centuries, The Woodlands truly is a garden of biographies. It is a place where stories are rediscovered and retold daily; where imagination, reality and memory converge. And while it should never be a surprise when we learn of the amazing lives many of our residents lived, it is a constant and astonishing reminder of how special this place is when another chapter of the story of The Woodlands is told.

A family portrait from Richard and Mark's childhood. Image courtesy of Richard Carter.

A family portrait from Richard and Mark's childhood. Image courtesy of Richard Carter.

This month’s Trailblazers are a husband and wife with strong ties to West Philadelphia who were laid to rest at The Woodlands in the recent past. To help us celebrate Black History Month, their son, Richard Carter, shares the legacy of his parents, Delores Inez Pollard Carter (1927—2008) and Louis H. Carter (1926—2011).

Delores was a musician, social worker, educator, and artist. As a public school teacher for over 30 years, she was one of the first African American educators in Wilmington, Delaware, and also taught at Bache Elementary School and Hamilton Elementary School in Philadelphia. During her retirement, she volunteered at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia for more than a decade, tutored illiterate adults, and also gave her time to Associated Services for the Blind and Visually Impaired [ABVI] by recording books and periodicals. In 2006, one of her paintings was featured on the poster for the Flower Market (the annual flower show held in Rittenhouse Square Park in Philadelphia). Although she passed away in 2008, her legacy as a teacher lives on in the countless lives she influenced over the course of her career. To her family, “her examples of humility, perseverance, kindness, strength, and faith continue to inspire.”

Louis also left behind a teaching legacy when he passed in 2011. Educated as a teacher and a social worker, he served in the US Army during WWII, and worked in child and public welfare, criminal and juvenile justice and mental health. In 1970, he joined the faculty of the School of Social Policy and Practice at the University of Pennsylvania, where he became the first African-American tenured professor of social work at Penn. Professor Louis Carter “carved his own niche at the School of Social Policy & Practice via his extension of the scholarship and practice surrounding the ‘functional approach,’ application of Otto Rank’s human engagement theory of will, and his commitment to critical analysis of institutionalized racism and its destructive impact on the human condition. He creatively used his life experience as course content to examine critical issues facing social work practitioners invested in efficacious practice,” said his son Richard Carter. After his death, Penn established the Louis H. Carter Endowed Lectureship, a program that invites speakers to the University annually to lecture on issues of race and racism. (Learn how you can contribute to Professor Carter's legacy at Penn at the end of this post.)

The legacy and impact of Delores and Louis continues in the professions chosen by their sons: Mark, a social worker, and Richard, an educator. Richard generously provided us with the incredible history of his parents’ lives and told us more about the impact their work and accomplishments have had on him.

What is your current position or profession?
I am an educator having served on the post-secondary and K-12 levels. Currently, I am a middle school principal. Mark is licensed social worker who has served in leadership positions in various non-profit agencies. He currently engages families and communities in Baltimore, Maryland via the organization Elev8.

How did you get to where you are today?
Our mother and father offered my brother and me strong examples of supporting underserved populations through professional practice. They also provided us with resources and opportunities to be well educated. Our mother took great care to expose us to the broader world around us. Dad and Mom provided us with structure and expectation throughout our childhoods.

How has the work of your parents influenced or impacted your choice of profession and your personal interests?
My brother pursued social work as a career and I am an educator. I would say that our parents had a huge impact on our professional priorities. Their examples made great impressions on us both. Mark is very creative and collects African and African-American art. I enjoy signing. Mom and Dad impacted the development of those interests as well.

What is your favorite part of their work, and why?
This is a difficult question because there are multiple favorites. With respect to my father, I am most proud of his accomplishment of being the first African-American professor to earn tenure in the School of Social Work [now the School of Social Policy and Practice] at the University of Pennsylvania. His practice there positively influenced and inspired generations of social workers. Dad sacrificed a great deal to reach his professional goals. Regarding my mother, I most admire her courage and humility. Each time that I imagine her boarding the train from Princeton to New York to attend classes at New York University as an undergraduate [and later as a graduate student] beginning in the 1940s, I am struck by her determination as both a woman and as an African-American. She was a "first" as well; having integrated the public school teaching ranks in Wilmington, Delaware. Mom was humble and rarely spoke about her vast accomplishments.

If you could ask either (or both!) of them one question today, what would it be?
I would ask them what Heaven is like and what things that they would most like for their 3 grandchildren to understand and remember about them.


You can rediscover the biographies of our permanent residents everyday. Visit The Woodlands anytime of the year--the gates are open from dawn 'til dusk!

If you'd like to make a contribution to the Louis H. Carter Endowed Lectureship, visit Penn's website, select Schools under the General Area option, Social Policy and Practice under Programs, and select Louis H. Carter Endowed Lectureship under the specific fund.

Tags Trailblazers, Delores Inez Pollard Carter, Louis H Carter, Social Work, Education, Black History Month, The Woodlands, Philadelphia, West Philadelphia, The Woodlands Cemetery
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Trailblazers, Yesterday and Today: Ezra Cresson and Timshel Purdum

August 1, 2013

 We're excited to introduce a new element that will be featured in our e-newsletters and blog: Trailblazers, Yesterday and Today! Each month, we'll profile a different "resident" of The Woodlands along with their contemporary counterpart.

For our inaugural edition, we're featuring Ezra Cresson and Timshel Purdum!

Ezra Townsend Cresson (1838-1926), who is buried in the Cresson Family Lot at The Woodlands (Section D, Lot 193), founded the American Entomological Society in 1860 and was involved in the Society for 65 years after its founding.

Cresson dedicated his life to entomology, or the study of insects--specifically that of Hymenoptera, which include ants, wasps, sawflies and horntails. He discovered hundreds of new species of hymenoptera, and published numerous articles on the subject throughout his life. In 1860, Cresson gave his entire collection of more than 60,000 beetles and wasps to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University. The American Entomological Society, the oldest entomological society in the Americas, still holds meetings at the Academy today. 

The Cresson family has been referred to as "The First Family of the American Entomological Society," as Cresson's two sons George Bringhurst Cresson and Ezra Townsend Cresson, Jr. followed in their father's footsteps, contributing greatly to the AES in their lifetimes.

Firefly-Night_small2.gif

In honor of the upcoming Firefly Night and The Woodlands' very own Ezra Cresson, we had a few questions for Ms. Timshel Purdum, the Director of Education and Lifelong Learning at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, about how Cresson and his founding of the American Entomological Society over 150 years ago has impacted the Academy.

What is your background, or, how did get to where you are today?
It was a circuitous route, but I hold a B.S. in Biology and M.A. in Environmental Education, with many years volunteering at museums. And as far as bugs go, I'm not an entomologist—but my father was an amateur Lepidopterist and he raised giant silkworm moths in our house such as Luna and Cecropia moths.

How has the American Entomological Society (AES) and Cresson's collection positively impacted what the Academy does today?
The AES still holds its regular meetings at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University!

The department's collections currently contains more than 3,500,000 specimens--of which more than 11,000 are types. A type specimen is THE example that serves to anchor or centralize the defining features of that particular species! Some of the types are from Cresson’s collection.

And we love bugs so much that our entomologists and education staff host a Bug Fest every year in August (this year our Bug Fest is August 10 and 11), where we do all things buggy--including opportunities to see specimens from our collections that are not usually on display.

What is your favorite part about or piece in the collection?
My favorite part of our entomology collection are not Cresson’s but the butterflies of  Titian Ramsey Peale. Some of these butterflies he put together in glass bound “books” called Peale Boxes. They look like a regular book until you open the cover. Inside is a glass box with mounted butterflies that you can see from the front and back. They are beautiful.

If you could ask Cresson one question, what would it be?
I am fascinated by the hymenoptera too (bees, wasps, ants). Social insects amaze me. I'd ask Cresson what fascinated him about these insects.

Thanks for talking with us, Timshel! 

If you have an idea for a Trailblazer feature, send us an email! 

Tags Ezra Cresson, Timshel Purdum, Academy of Natural Sciences, American Entomological Society, Trailblazers, entomology, Woodlands Cemetery, The Woodlands, Philadelphia, West Philadelphia
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