Blessing Hospital superintendent pushed for nurse education, licensing

Nursing education celebrates its 125th year in Quincy this year.
Blessing Hospital Training School for Nurses, now known as Blessing-Rieman College of Nursing and Health Sciences, accepted its first students in 1891. By the time Mary Curtis Wheeler arrived in Quincy in 1899, the school had graduated five classes of professional nurses. Wheeler was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., and was sent to live with relatives in Wisconsin after her mother died. She graduated from Ripon College in 1890, moved to Chicago, and enrolled in Illinois Training School for Nurses, graduating in 1893. Her first job was as superintendent of Sherman Hospital in Elgin. During this time she took advanced courses such as medical dissection at the University of Michigan. In fall 1899 she moved to Quincy and became the superintendent of Blessing Hospital and the Training School. While in Quincy, she greatly improved the training for nurse candidates and participated in the movement that changed nursing education and led to licensing and the recognition of registered nurses in Illinois.
The newly formed Illinois State Nurses Association met in 1901, and, shortly thereafter, began working to improve nursing education throughout the state. By 1903, the group had written a bill to present to the state legislature under the title, "An Act to Regulate the Practice of Professional Nursing of the Sick in the State of Illinois."
Mary Wheeler was part of the delegation that went to Springfield to lobby the legislators. Hospitals and physicians were opposed to the bill for financial reasons and concerns about loss of control over nurses. The bill passed and was sent to the governor, who vetoed it. That year there were 65 hospitals and 50 unregulated training schools in Illinois. There were no standardized admissions criteria, curriculum or graduation requirements. Anyone could call himself a professional nurse. The bill would have established a regulatory body that would inspect and accredit training schools. This would allow graduates to take a licensing exam and call themselves registered nurses.
In 1905, a revised registration bill was introduced in the legislature by the state nurses association trying to cover all of the objections from the various constituencies. Wheeler was on the organization's legislative committee and worked on the bill. This time the opposition was from small hospitals that employed a variety of "nurses," correspondence schools and church-related schools that objected to state control. That bill also was vetoed because the governor felt it was unfair to people with no training but long experience.
Wheeler was constantly looking for ways to enhance nursing education and was granted a leave of absence in September 1903 to attend a graduate course in hospital economics at Teachers College, Columbia University. This course was by invitation only and taught by some of the early nursing leaders. She completed the prestigious course and returned to Quincy in June 1904 with ideas for curricular changes and improvements for the hospital. Later she signed a reciprocal agreement with Cook County Hospital and the Illinois Training School to send the senior class of Blessing to Chicago for a three-month course in diseases of children. At the same time, students from Illinois Training School would be in Quincy working with the patients of Blessing Hospital. Those students only had training in large wards and needed experience with private patients.
The third and final registration bill, again with Wheeler's participation, was passed and signed in 1907. During this process she not only lobbied in Springfield but wrote letters to the editor of the Quincy newspapers, among others. She explained that the bill would require schools to adhere to a minimum standard but would not deny patients the right to have practical or non-professional nurses, nor would it interfere with religious societies.
Because of her work on this issue, Gov. Charles S. Deneen appointed Wheeler one of five nurses on the first Illinois State Board of Examiners of Registered Nurses in 1908. Their job was to visit the 87 nursing schools in the state and inspect them for minimum standards. Sixty schools applied to be registered the first year. Blessing was one of the 34 schools that succeeded and whose graduates were eligible to sit for the licensing exam and call themselves registered nurses.
The first state meeting of the Illinois State Association of Graduate Nurses to be held outside Chicago was in Quincy in May 1909, at the invitation of Wheeler. The Blessing Hospital Alumni Association hosted the meeting. Chief topics discussed were the need for trained nurses and preventing the spread of tuberculosis. The sessions, which were held at the Elks Hall, were open to the public.
In 1910, after 11 years as superintendent of Blessing Hospital and Training School, Wheeler resigned. Her resignation was accepted with regret by the Board of Lady Managers. The hospital had grown and prospered under her care. She was recognized as an inspiration to her fellow nurses and all who worked for the hospital.
After leaving Quincy, Wheeler was secretary of the Illinois State Board of Nurse Examiners, 1911-13; president of the American Society of Superintendents of Training Schools, now the National League for Nursing, in 1912 and 1913; a member of the board of directors of the American Nurses Association; a member of the National Committee on Red Cross Nursing at the outbreak of World War I; superintendent of Illinois Training School from 1913 to 1924, after which the school was absorbed by the University of Chicago; and general secretary of the Michigan State Nurses Association from 1925 to 1930. She continued to champion registration, and is known for leading the Publication Committee of the American Nurses Association when it compiled and published the first national list of accredited schools of nursing in 1920.
Arlis Dittmer is a retired medical librarian. During her 26 years with Blessing Health System, she became interested in medical and nursing history -- both topics frequently overlooked in history.
Sources
"Advantages for Nurses." The Quincy Daily Herald, Feb. 15, 1907, 6.
Church, Olga Maranjian. "Mary Curtis Wheeler, 1869-1944. In American Nursing: A Biographical Dictionary, edited by Vern L. Bullough, Olga M. Church, Alice P. Stein, 334-335. New York: Garland Publishing Inc., 1988.
Dinwiddie, Mary. A History of the Illinois State Nurses' Association, 1901-1935. Chicago, Il: Illinois State Nurses' Association, 1937.
"Miss Wheeler Again at Head." The Quincy Daily Herald, June 14, 1904, 2.
"Miss Wheeler of Blessing." The Quincy Daily Journal, Dec. 1, 1906, 5.
"Nurses to Meet Here" The Quincy Daily Journal, May 7, 1909, 8.
"Obituaries." American Journal of Nursing 45, no. 2 (1945): 164.
"Resigns After Eleven Years." The Quincy Daily Journal, April 7, 1910, 10.
"State Nurses Come to Quincy." The Quincy Daily Whig, Nov. 13, 1908, 8.
"The Addition to Blessing Hospital." The Quincy Daily Journal, March 31, 1904, 5.





