- Person
- 1911-?
Trained as a nurse at St George's and worked in the Royal Air Force for several years before emigrating to Australia in 1948
Trained as a nurse at St George's and worked in the Royal Air Force for several years before emigrating to Australia in 1948
Born in Bromley, Kent [now Greater London]. Trained as a nurse at St George's and worked at Atkinson Morley's Hospital before emigrating to Australia
Born in Worcestershire. Trained as a nurse at St George's before emigrating to Australia in 1960.
Born in London. Trained as a nurse at St George's and later emigrated to Australia after marrying junior doctor Ray Chynoweth (then Rodney Smith's houseman).
Born in Hawkhurst, Kent. Trained as a nurse at St George's before emigrating to Australia.
Born in Teddington, London. Trained as a nurse at St George's and then worked abroad in Rhodesia and Hong Kong (the latter in the Army Nursing Corps) before settling in Australia.
Born in London. Trained as a nurse at St George's on the new experimental '2 + 1' course, 1965-1968, followed by a degree in social sciences at the University of York. Subsequently worked as a research officer at the General Nursing Council.
Responsible for interviewing students about their experience on the experimental '2 + 1' nursing course at St George's, 1966-1971
Born in Tunbridge Wells. Trained as a nurse at St George's and returned there as a tutor in nursing after completing a tutor's course at Battersea College. Subsequently became Chief Nursing Officer of South East Thames Regional Health Authority and was appointed a life peer in 1997.
Trained as a nurse Great Ormond Street Hospital and St George's. Worked at St George's for the majority of her career, initially in the outpatients department at Tooting (1965-1980), then later in the new oncology team (1985-2000) following a joint appointment with the Royal Marsden Hospital in Sutton.
Trained as a nurse at St George's and returned to work there after a period in Africa. She was promoted to Nursing Officer and subsequently Nurse Planner, in which latter role she was involved in the planning of the new Tooting site.
Born in Aberdeen, Scotland. Trained as a nurse at St George's after completing a PhD in biochemistry at the University of Sheffield. Subsequently became a lecturer and researcher in nursing at universities including Edinburgh, Sheffield and Hull.
Trained as a nurse at Grove Fever Hospital, Tooting, before it was acquired by St George's
Born in Rugby, Warwickshire. Trained and worked as a nurse at St George's.
Trained as a nurse at St George's, 1932-1936. Subsequently joined the Navy and became Matron-in-Chief of the Royal Naval Nursing Service, 1962-1966. (Her successor in the post, Mary Fetherston-Dilke, was also St George's-trained.)
Trained as a nurse at St George's, 1956-1959, after previously studying English at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford