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Baltimore City Hospitals photograph album

 Collection
Identifier: PP 0334

Abstract

This collection contains a scrapbook photograph album assembled by Nellie Frances Pearce Daniel (1902-1998), depicting her time working as a Licensed Practical Nurse at Baltimore City Hospitals, 1933-1958. The album also includes select photographs from the years prior to her employment at BCH as an employee at Lever Brothers, her travels, and her involvement with the BCH Alumnae Association. Also included are 3 certificates of professional activity by Miss Pearce, and an obituary for Emma Pike, a colleague.

Dates

  • 1930 - 1974

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

This collection is open for research use.

Conditions Governing Use

The reproduction of materials in this collection may be subject to copyright restrictions. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine and satisfy copyright clearances or other case restrictions when publishing or otherwise distributing materials found in the collections. For more information visit the MCHC’s Rights and Permissions page.

Historical Note

Baltimore City Hospitals

The City of Baltimore purchased 46 acres on the 4900 block of Eastern Avenue in Baltimore in 1862 as a site for a replacement for "Calverton", the almshouse which it had operated in common with Baltimore County since 1820 just east of Gwynn's Falls. The original "Bay View Asylum"- so called because it commanded a phenomenal sweep of Chesapeake Bay, especially from its central cupola which rose 184 feet above sea level- was a three-story brich structure designed in the shape of an inverted T by William Marshall, opened for the reception of the city's insane and paupers in 1866. In 1871, the institution began its slow evolution into a public hospital by accepting its first paying patients in addition to the people remanded to its care by the courts. In the latter part of the 1870s, the authorities erected a four-story brick structure just north of the 714-foot long Asylum building for the separate accomodation of the insane; in the course of the 1880s a smaller structure went up just west of this to enable the authorities to segregate their charges by sex, males occupying the smaller structure and females the larger one.

While additional wings were added to the Asylum Building and more and more outbuildings arose around the farm which covered most of the acreage, no more substantial changes occured until the administration of Mayor J. Barry Mahool, which governed from 1907 to 1911. Mahool made space in the perenially overcrowded Asylum Building by constructing a parallel institution-Sydenham Hospital- for African Americans at the southeastern corner of the Bay View property, where it operated from 1909 through 1923. He also began construction of a Y-shaped "general hospital", usually referred to as "Ward A" to the north and east of the Asylum Building. Beginning with Ward A's opening in 1911, the city at last had a separate municipally operated general hospital, as opposed to a mental hospital, a tuberculosis hospital, or a home for the indigent sick.

It was this general hospital aspect that grew, first with the 1932 Nurses' Home built to the south of Ward A, and then with the six-story City Hospital Building of 1938, which had the old Ward A as just one of its wings. The entire operation had been re-named "Baltimore City Hospital" in 1925 to de-emphasize it's "asylum" past; in 1935 its traditional supervisors, the Board of City Charities, was converted into the Department of Public Welfare to reflect an increased level of professionalism.

In the course of the 1940s the last vestiges of the institution's "asylum" past were phased out, and in the early 1950s the 1866 Asylum Building was gutted and completely rebuilt as a five-story, rather than a three-story, adjunct of the City Hospital. It also lost its trademark central tower at this point. Finally, in 1984 the city, alarmed at the expense of operating a municipal hospital, sold the land and buildings of the sprawling complex to Johns Hopkins Hospital- which promplty re-named it "Francis Scott Key Medical Center"- for $1. It was again renamed in 1994 to become the "Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center".

Biographical Note

Nellie Frances Pearce was born on April 22, 1902 in Camden County, North Carolina. She was the eldest of six children born to Leah Chessie Simmons (1878-1968) and George Frank Pearce (1879-1970). Her younger siblings were William Charles (1903-1967), George Ira (1905-1996), Sarah Edna (1908-1992), Curtis Worth (1910-1924), and Andrew Wilson (1914-1981). Nellie grew up in North Carolina, but left around 1930 to work for Lever Brothers, a manufacturing company. In 1933 she moved to Baltimore, Maryland to train as a nurse at Baltimore City Hospitals.

In September of that year, she was accepted into a training program to become a Licensed Practical Nurse. She completed the course and was awarded a certificate of completion on September 7, 1934. Five months later in February 1935, Nellie went before the Maryland State Board of Examiners of Nurses, and received her Licensed Practical Nurse Certificate. Nurse Pearce lived in the Nurse's Home on the BCH campus and worked there until June 1958, when she left to get married. However, she remained involved with Baltimore City Hospitals as a member of the BCH Alumnae Association and the Maryland Licensed Practical Nurses Association, both organizations of which she helped to organize.

Her husband was Edward Abbott Daniel (1897-1975), a resident of Hopewell, Virginia. The couple married on July 5, 1958 in Gates County, North Carolina. They made their home in Hopewell, and Nellie continued to live there after her husband's death in 1975. She died on July 17, 1998 at the age of 96 and was buried at Westlawn Cemetery in Elizabeth City, Pasquotank County, North Carolina.

Extent

1.0 Linear Feet (1 album and 1 folder)

Language of Materials

English

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of Lois Jones, January 2011.

Scope and Contents

The Baltimore City Hospitals photograph album was assembled by Nellie Frances Pearce (later Daniel), who worked as a nurse on the campus from 1933 through 1958. The album consists of 61 pages containing photographs of the hospital buildings and residence halls, doctors and nurses, patients, and some images of Nellie's vacations. Most of the photographs are labeled with the location or name of the buildings, and many of the individuals are identified. She also provides some written commentary, describing events that occured. For example, page two of the scrapbook contains a photograph of the Infirmary Building, with a long path leading up to the entrance. Below the image, Nellie wrote, "September 4, 1933, I, Nellie Pearce walked up this walk toward the large building looking for the Nursing office...I found it, [and] was accepted for training for Licensed Practical Nurse." Images of other buildings include the Doctor's home, the Nurse's home, the Mens and Women's Psych buildings, the General and Chronic Hospitals, and the Tuberculosis buildings.

Nellie includes many photos of the nurses she worked with, both in uniform and out of uniform, and the nurses that taught and mentored her in her training. On page six she has pasted a large photograph of four women in a white dresses and caps. The caption reads, "Miss Hildibrandt, Miss Hartwell, Miss Sherstan, and Miss Lowe...Miss Lowe was the 1934 Class teacher from September 1933 to September 1934.." Other images include a snowball fight on the grounds of the campus, playing sports, and gardening, and simple posed snapshots. Nellie indentifies her self in many of these photographs.

In the latter pages of the scrapbook, she includes photographs from areas around Baltimore, as well as outside the state. There are images of Loch Raven Reservoir, Patterson Park, Druid Hill Park, Fort Smallwood, Glencoe, and Western Maryland. The final pages of the scrapbook contain photographs from Nellie's life before she became a nurse, when she worked at Lever Brothers. Her caption reads, "How did Lever Bros get in the picture-? You see, Nellie Pearce worked for Lever Bros 1930 and 1931. Nofolk and surrounding area, Richmond, Va., and Philadelphia, Pa. The manager of Lever Bros told Nellie Pearce the least thing she could do, since it was the great depression, was to go in training--therefore, that is how she got to Baltimore City Hospital and due to the depression the class of 1934 was the last until 1940. Nellie Pearce was the Crew Manager."

On the final two pages of the scrapbook, Nellie pasted an envelope containing one of the last letters she received from Emma Pike, a former colleague at Baltimore City Hospitals, as well as the 1953 edition of "The Dome", the School of Practical Nursing yearbook. Inside the cover of the book, Nellie includes a photograph of herself and her husband, and writes her notes and thoughts throughout the book.

There are two additional folders in this collection aside from the photograph album. Folder 1 contains three certificates awarded to Nellie Frances Pearce, two of which relate to her training program and board certification, and one a reward for long service. Folder 2 contains a single laminated obituary for Nellie's colleague Emma Pike, who died in 1974.

Title
Guide to the Baltimore City Hospitals photograph album
Status
Completed
Author
Mallory Harwerth
Date
2023-05
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the H. Furlong Baldwin Library Repository

Contact:
H. Furlong Baldwin Library
Maryland Center for History and Culture
610 Park Avenue
Baltimore MD 21201 United States
4106853750