In the turn-of-the-century United States, women were among the first chiropractors. In a period when established medical schools barred women […]
![Composite photo of graduates at Minneapolis, MN’s Carroll School of Chiropractic in 1920. The school’s founders, Stella and J.C. Carroll, are depicted, as are four female and four male graduates.](https://i0.wp.com/nursingclio.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Howell_image3_CarrollSchoolClass1920.jpg?fit=640%2C495&ssl=1)
In the turn-of-the-century United States, women were among the first chiropractors. In a period when established medical schools barred women […]
Shortly after the United States entered the First World War in April 1917, Dr. Rosalie Slaughter Morton of Virginia published […]
While serving as an ambulance driver during the First World War, Pat Beauchamp witnessed the harrowing sight of four soldiers […]
On December 13, 1933, Captain A. J. C. Sington, then Chairman of the British Guide Dogs for the Blind, read […]
In a 1918 article about aid programs for refugee women and children in Italy, Ernesta Fasciotti recalled an encounter with […]
On October 24, 1918, fifty-eight-year-old Elizabeth was admitted to the City of London Mental Hospital by her husband.1 He stated […]
Rarely does a debate about the bones of soldiers collected during World War I enter into public consciousness. But in […]
In March 1917, Nurse G., a Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) nurse, was on duty at 29 General Hospital in Salonika, […]
For something that played such a prevalent role in life at the front, sex and venereal disease (or VD) have […]
We are quickly approaching the 1918 centennial, commemorating the end of the First World War, with ceremonies and events being […]