At 18:28 31/05/2008, you wrote:
>This period is before Florence Nightingale gave nursing it's 
>prestige. Before her work in the Crimean War, nursing was not a 
>particularly skilled or important job- most women did it more or 
>less by default. I doubt there would have been an identifiable 
>uniform for a nurse in the 1840's.

During the Crimean War nurses at Scutari did not wear uniforms, as 
you say. They wore clean white aprons as a sign of their profession, 
which was not considered respectable, in most places. (A new 
biography on her has just been shown on British TV, which, of course 
I missed, but there were articles in several papers/magazines.) 
Uniforms were, I believe a later innovation, when the Nightingale 
School was instituted at St. Thomas's Hospital in London, when Miss 
Nightingale returned from the Crimea.

Suzi

>
>Karen
>Seamstrix
>
>-- "otsisto" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I would think that a nurse would probably have worn something to identify
>her profession from a maid or servant. What about the BBC series
>"upstairs/downstairs" (this might be to late) or did they have the sterio
>type uniforms? There should be several BBC series that show maids in
>uniforms.
>
>-----Original Message-----
>It's not quite 1840s but here's a fashion plate from 1852 showing a nurse
>http://www.marquise.de/en/1800/pics/1852_4.shtml (presumably a nurse would
>wear similar clothes to a maid) I think a dark coloured wool in a somewhat
>conservative cut (nobody likes their servants dressing above their station)
>would be the most sensible style for somebody who is doing potentially messy
>work (unless it was so messy you would want a cotton wash dress) a cap was a
>badge of servitude for many years after other women had abandoned them (even
>into the early 20th century you see maids and waitresses in restaurants
>wearing some sort of remnant of a cap on their heads). Clean, starched,
>white aprons were also important for female servants when they were 'on
>display' in a sense (e.g. when answering the door or serving visitors) as
>another badge of servitude it showed their status and that they hadn't been
>doing any messy work (or at least not recently).
>I know this is later than your period, but Isabella Beeton's book of
>household management outlines the duties of various servants and sometimes
>includes references to clothing
>http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/b/beeton/isabella/household/chapter41.h
>tml
>You may also find images of servants in the background in some royal
>portraits
>http://www.royalcollection.org.uk/eGallery/category.asp?category=AAPICTURES&;
>row=0
>HTH
>Elizabeth
>
>
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