Jane BELL OBE

BELL, Jane

Service Numbers: Not yet discovered
Enlisted: Not yet discovered
Last Rank: Not yet discovered
Last Unit: 1st Australian General Hospital
Born: Middlebie, Dumfrieshire, Scotland, 16 March 1873
Home Town: Not yet discovered
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Matron
Died: Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, Vic., 6 August 1959, aged 86 years, cause of death not yet discovered
Cemetery: Not yet discovered
Memorials: Bundaberg Australian Service Nurses Memorial Wall
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World War 1 Service

5 Dec 1914: Involvement 1st Australian General Hospital, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '23' embarkation_place: Melbourne embarkation_ship: HMAT Kyarra embarkation_ship_number: A55 public_note: ''
5 Dec 1914: Embarked 1st Australian General Hospital, HMAT Kyarra, Melbourne

Active in Professional Nursing Affairs

Jane Bell was born in Scotland in 1873. Following the death of both her parents and four of her siblings from tuberculosis in 1886, she and her three remaining siblings migrated to Australia with the help of their local Presbyterian Congregation. She commenced nurse training at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Sydney in 1898, rising to the position of Night Superintendent. Following this, she was Matron of the Bundaberg Hospital in Queensland in 1903, and from 1904, Matron of the Brisbane General Hospital. In 1906, she went to London to undertake obstetrical training at Queen Charlotte’s Hospital, followed by a period as Assistant Lady Superintendent at the Royal Infirmary in Edinburgh, Scotland.

In November 1910, she was appointed Lady Superintendent of the Melbourne Hospital, a position she held until her retirement in June 1934 . During her tenure, she created the position of Theatre Sister in 1912, appointed the first ‘Sister Tutor’ in an Australian hospital in 1921, established the Nurses’ Preliminary Training School in 1927, and created the first Special Diet Kitchen in an Australian hospital in 1929. In addition, she was involved in the formation of the RMH Past Trainees’ Association in 1917 (now the RMH Graduate Nurses’ Association) and was instrumental in the introduction of State registration for nurses in 1924.

She was very active in professional nursing affairs. She was a foundation member of the Nurses’ Board of Victoria from 1924-1950; a member of the Royal Victorian Trained Nurses’Association from 1911, including its President in 1931-34 and 1938-46; helped to form the Australasian Nursing Federation in 1899 and the Royal Australian Nursing Federation in 1924.

For a period in 1914-15, she was Principal Matron of the First Australian General Hospital during World War One, based in Egypt and treating Gallipoli casualties. At the time the position, status, authority and working conditions of army nurses were undefined. Miss Bell waged an incessant battle with the Army Medical Service, seeking to clarify the position and responsibilities of the nursing service and to place its control and discipline in the hands of its own members. A later inquiry vindicated her views and implemented her recommendations.

In 1937, she represented Australia at the meeting of the International Council of Nurses in London. Miss Bell’s interests were in nursing education and the promotion of post-graduate nursing qualifications, salaries and working conditions and the raising of nursing standards. She was appointed an Order of the British Empire in 1944 and died in 1959 as a patient at the Royal Melbourne Hospital.

Sources: UNA, Nursing Journal, October 1959; The Australian Dictionary of Biography; Jennifer A. Williams and Rupert D. Goodman: Jane Bell, OBE (1873-1959), RMH Graduate Nurses’ Association, 1988; Alan Gregory: The Ever Open Door: A History of The Royal Melbourne Hospital, Hyland House, 1998.

http://www.mh.org.au/2011-nursing-great-jane-bell-s-memorabilia-donated/w1/i1016709/

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Biography

Matron in Chief
AANS
No 1 AGH

Born 16 March 1873 in Middlebie, Dumfrieshire, Scotland
Daughter of William BELLE and Helen nee JOHNSTONE
Sister of J M STEINDL
Of 'Coona Brae' Bundaberg, Qld.
Trained at Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney
Enlisted 09 November 1914 at Melbourne, Vic.
Aged 41 years
Embarked 05 December 1914 per 'Kyarra'
Served in Egypt
Returned to Australia 01 October 1915 per 'Euripides'
Appointment terminated 15 October 1915
Died 06 August 1959 in Melbourne, Vic.

Jane Bell, OBE, was born on a farm in Scotland in 1873. After her parents and four of her siblings died of tuberculosis Jane and her remaining siblings emigrated
to Australia. She trained in nursing, and today is highly regarded for her contribution to the development of the nursing profession, both nationally and internationally.
Jane pioneered innovative changes in nursing education, the promotion of post-graduate nursing qualifications, salaries and working conditions and the raising of nursing standards. In 1917 Jane established the Past Trainees Association (the forerunner of The Royal Melbourne Hospital Graduate Nurses’ Association) and in 1937 she was selected to represent Australian nurses at the International Congress of Nursing held in London, a great honour. Jane received several military medals for her wartime nursing leadership in 1914–1915 and received an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (obe) in 1944. In Victoria, Jane became the longest serving Lady Superintendent of the Royal Melbourne Hospital, (1910 to 1934). During her tenure, she created the position of ‘theatre sister’ in 1912, was appointed the first ‘sister tutor’ in an Australian hospital in 1921, established the Nurses’ Preliminary Training School in 1927 and created the first ‘special diet kitchen’ in an Australian hospital in 1929.
Jane recognised the importance of nurses having a broad range of clinical and educational experiences. As early as 1933 Jane made approaches to the University
of Melbourne to have them conduct postgraduate diploma courses for nurses. These courses were eventually introduced in 1996. Jane was a foundation member of the Nurses’ Board of Victoria, and helped form the Royal Australian Nursing Federation. She was also instrumental in the introduction of state registration for nurses in 1924. Jane served twice as President of the Royal Victorian Trained Nurses' Association (later the Royal Victorian College of Nursing) and on her retirement in 1934, became an Honorary Life Governor of the Royal Melbourne Hospital where she died in 1959 aged 86

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