First Blessing nursing grad made her mark on city

Martha Dean Fitzgerald was born in Burlington, Iowa, on March 7, 1873. After high school graduation, she moved to Adams County to live with her grandmother. Other than a brief stay in Mattoon, she lived in Quincy for most of her life. Fitzgerald was one of the first three graduates of Blessing Hospital Training School for Nurses.
She graduated with Jessie Cline and Clara Bell on Sept. 6, 1894. Graduation exercises were held just a block away at the Temple B'Nai Sholom. The three new graduates all went to work at Blessing Hospital after the ceremony and reception.
Fitzgerald later took a nursing job at the Illinois Soldiers and Sailors Home in Quincy. Trained nurses were in such demand, they often switched jobs at three or six month intervals. Trained nurses also worked in private duty. In 1899, Fitzgerald and her roommate, Jessie Cline, had a telephone installed so they could receive calls for private duty work, usually in the home. They were both active in the Adams County Anti-Tuberculosis Society. Fitzgerald valued education and went on to complete postgraduate work at Wesley Hospital in Chicago and the School of Civics and Philanthropy (now part of the University of Chicago) in nutrition.
In 1909, the Illinois Department of Registration and Accreditation accredited Blessing Training School for Nurses. Fitzgerald, as a previous graduate, was allowed to register without taking the licensure examination. She was now a registered nurse. After years of working private duty at Blessing Hospital and at the Soldiers and Sailors Home, she took a hiatus to raise chickens with her friend, Edith Hall. At the same time, her fellow nurse Emily Moore left nursing. The June 26, 1917, Quincy Daily Journal said they "were two of Quincy's most popular and successful trained nurses and during their professional careers gained enviable reputations and established a high mark of efficiency in their calling."
Perhaps raising chickens was the break she needed as the rest of her working life was spent in nursing and welfare work. In the summer of 1918, Fitzgerald was back at Blessing, and when the visiting nurse at Cheerful Home left to take a graduate course in New York, Fitzgerald took over that position temporarily.
The concept of a visiting nurse was first mentioned in Quincy in an 1894 speech by Mrs. E.J. Parker. She talked about Blessing Hospital and the need for a visiting nurse to care for patients in their homes. It was only because of a lack of funds that the program was not started until 1897 when the Humane Society joined with the hospital to support that position for the community. Unfortunately, the project ran out of funds and having a visiting nurse in the community was only sporadically supported until March 1909, when a Visiting Nurse Association was formed in Quincy. The group raised $1,000 and hired Miss Griswold of Chicago, who arrived in July. The job of a visiting nurse was to give bedside care and teach hygiene, sanitation, nutrition and disease prevention in the home.
The program proved to be such a help to the community that by 1914 there were three visiting nurses in Quincy. One worked with the schools and the Children's Aid Society, one worked for the Electric Wheel Co., and one worked for Associated Charities and the Cheerful Home Settlement.
Cheerful Home started in 1888 with the goal to provide a safe place for children to play and to learn useful things such as gardening, sewing and cooking. Later the home offered day care and meals for children of working mothers, a kindergarten, a gymnasium, mother's clubs, tutors, well baby clinics and a visiting nurse. The home also offered classes in household skills and crafts, and held dances for young people.
From 1918 until her retirement in 1933, Fitzgerald worked for Cheerful Home. The newspaper frequently reported her speeches on nutrition given to mother's clubs, women's organizations, churches and school associations. She spoke of the need to keep babies and children healthy with good sanitation, proper foods, clean water, milk and fresh air. In an Oct. 22, 1921, article in The Quincy Daily Herald, three visiting nurses were singled out for their work on disease prevention. "Quincy and Adams County are fortunate in having three of these nurses, Miss Martha Fitzgerald of Cheerful Home, Miss Gertrude Simmons of the Anti-Tuberculosis Association, and Miss Daisy Mayo of the Red Cross."
Fitzgerald was active in local and state nursing organizations. She was given credit for the success of the Illinois State Association of Graduate Nurses meeting held in Quincy in October 1921. She was chairman of the Arrangements Committee and a member of the State Executive Committee. The Jan. 19, 1921, Quincy Daily Herald quoted the Illinois Bulletin of the Illinois Nurses Association saying, "Quincy is one of the garden spots of the middle west, and has become celebrated as a convention city. Let's go is the slogan of Quincy. Why not make it ours?"
During Fitzgerald's career at Cheerful Home, her special interest was in public welfare work with children. She was "ever faithful, untiring in her devotion to the unfortunate, the ill and the needy. ..." She always stressed the importance of good health and healthy living. For the last few months of her life, Leona Faber, the Class of 1930 and one of Fitzgerald's Cheerful Home "girls," took care of her. She died of arteriosclerosis on Aug. 27, 1938. Her obituary stated, "In Quincy, her name was synonymous with mercy, human understanding and help."
In 1940, the Alumnae Association of Blessing Hospital School of Nursing started the Martha Dean Fitzgerald Student Loan Fund for senior nursing students. The fund lent $100 per year at $20 per applicant. The student had to pay the money back at 1% interest within three months of graduation. The group chose to honor Fitzgerald because of her exemplary career, her activities in state and local alumnae associations, and because she was in the first graduating class.
Arlis Dittmer is a retired medical librarian. During her years with Blessing Health System, she became interested in medical and nursing history -- both topics frequently overlooked in history.
Sources:
"At Blessing Hospital." Quincy Daily Herald, Oct. 13, 1894, p. 8.
"Calling Our Attention to Public Service of Nurses." Quincy Daily Herald, Oct. 22, 1921, p. 6.
"Cheerful Home Will Look After Welfare of Babies of Quincy." Quincy Daily Herald, May 13, 1921, p. 5.
"Convention of Nurses." Quincy Daily Herald, Jan. 19, 1921, p. 13.
"Five Years of Noble Work." Quincy Daily Journal, April 18, 1893, p. 4.
"Martha Dean Fitzgerald, Head of Cheerful Home For Thirteen Years, Dies." Quincy Herald-Whig, Aug. 28, 1938.
"Miss Martha Fitzgerald Enters Poultry Business." Quincy Daily Journal, June 26, 1917, p. 7.
"Needy Sick to be Aided." Quincy Daily Whig, March 23, 1909, p. 8.
"Obituaries." American Journal of Nursing 38, No. 11 (1938): 1291.
"Scholarships and Loan Funds." American Journal of Nursing 41, No. 10 (1941): 1226.
"The Visiting Nurses." Quincy Daily Whig, January 20, 1897, p. 4.
"What the Cheerful Home is Doing; What it Needs." Quincy Daily Journal, May 20, 1914, p. 2.





