Good
Ida Smith, the daughter of a smallholder and greengrocer in Radcliffe-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, was born in 1920. She drove a delivery van during the Second World War. In May 1946 she entered the nursing training school at the General Hospital, Nottingham. She left the course after two years, and later married a Mr Mottram.
The first notebook has the crest of the General Hospital, Nottingham, embossed onto its front cover; it contains notes on Anatomy and Physiology, some illustrated with sketches and diagrams; at the back of the volume are notes on Hygiene, incorporating ventilation, lighting, heating, water supply, infection, food, milk, drainage, insects and parasites (MS 817/1);
The second notebook contains notes on Nursing Theory (the first two pages consist of Nurses Home Rules), incorporating the history of nursing, ward work, beds, positions used in nursing, washing the patient, bed sores, admitting and observing patients, feeding, temperature, pulse, respiration, excretion, drugs and their administration, enemas, sterilization, dressings, wounds, the nursing of sick children, and last offices; in the middle of notebook are initialled lists relating to bed making, trays and trolleys, and bandaging; at the back of the volume are notes on First Aid (MS 817/2).
No archival arrangement has been necessary.
Accessible to all readers.
The notebooks were acquired by Manuscripts and Special Collections in October 2007.
Identification of copyright holders of unpublished material is often difficult.
Permission to make any published use of any material from the collection must be sought in writing from the Keeper of Manuscripts and Special Collections
Reprographic copies can be supplied for educational and private study purposes only, depending on access status and the condition of the documents.
Similar notebooks are numbered MS 805/1 (dated c.1926) and Uhg/T11/1 (dated 1925).
This description is the only finding aid available for the collection. Copyright on this finding aid belongs to The University of Nottingham.