{"id":19106,"date":"2020-05-12T11:00:57","date_gmt":"2020-05-12T15:00:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=19106"},"modified":"2024-01-26T15:00:26","modified_gmt":"2024-01-26T20:00:26","slug":"nightingale-lady-and-legend","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2020\/05\/12\/nightingale-lady-and-legend\/","title":{"rendered":"Nightingale: Lady and Legend"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Stephen J. Greenberg ~<\/em><\/p>\n

Some people seem not quite real.\u00a0 Not in the sense that they are imaginary, fictional beings; they existed, and they touched and changed their world and ours. But it is difficult to think of them as plain, walking-around human beings. Their attitudes and accomplishments just seem to be beyond any quotidian matters. George Washington was such a person. Abraham Lincoln was another. And Florence Nightingale, whose 200th birthday is on May 12th, 2020, certainly fits in this category as well.<\/p>\n

Nightingale lived to be just past 90, dying in London on August 13, 1910. She was active until the very end, although she was famously an invalid for much of that long life. What is usually recalled (and celebrated) about her fits into five crucial years, from her departure to Scutari in modern day Turkey in 1854, and from there to the battlefront in Russia, to the publication of Notes on Nursing: What it is, and What it is not<\/a><\/em>, in 1859. But her career, and her writing, were only just beginning when she returned to England from the Crimean War.<\/p>\n