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Lucy
Osburn 1835 - 1891 nurse
Lucy
Osburn (1835-1891), nurse, was born on 10 May 1835 at Leeds, England,
daughter of Ann (born Rimington) and William Osburn, egyptologist.
She was well educated and had practical nursing and visiting experience
in hospitals from Jerusalem to Kaiserswerth, Dusseldorf. She attended
the Nightingale Training School at St Thomas's Hospital, London,
in 1866-67.
Following an appeal by the New South Wales Colonial Secretary, Henry
Parkes, to Florence Nightingale, for trained nurses for the Sydney
Infirmary and Dispensary, Lucy Osburn was appointed lady superintendent.
She arrived with five sisters on 5 March 1868. The Infirmary's buildings
were verminous; there was no plumbing; the quality of patient care
was inimical to health; the promised new residence (Nightingale
Wing) had not been finished.
Miss Osburn's administrative, political and social skills were of
a high order but she did not have a conciliatory disposition towards
inferiors who disagreed with her. Her capacity to win and keep powerful
friends caused resentment within a hospital board not noted for
competence, riven by sectarian disputes, and unfamiliar with the
concept of professional nursing. Some doctors and board members
interfered with ward management and nurse discipline. The responsibilities
of manager and lady superintendent were ill-defined, the latter
having no control over domestic staff and stores. The English sisters
proved fractious and insubordinate and only one was to survive the
expiry of their contracts in December 1870.
A royal commission into public charities (1873-74) chaired by William
Windeyer paid special attention to the chaos at the Infirmary, which
had become notorious. Lucy Osburn had been consulted about the appointment
of the commission and was the only official to emerge from its enquiries
with honour.
Alarmed by conflicting reports during the first three years and
disappointed by the dispersal of the Nightingale Fund sponsored
team - the first ever sent abroad - Florence Nightingale had lost
confidence in Miss Osburn. Dr Alfred Roberts became aware of this
during a visit to Miss Nightingale in London in 1873 and used his
privileged information to justify a public accusation that Miss
Osburn (an old enemy) had departed from Nightingale principles.
Both Parkes and Windeyer wrote privately to Miss Nightingale, discrediting
Roberts and warmly testifying to Miss Osburn's success under adverse
conditions. Although this did not restore Lucy to Miss Nightingale's
favour, Nightingale training was secure in Australia. Miss Osburn's
nurses were to filter throughout the Australian colonies and even
to London, where the matronship of Brompton Hospital fell in 1881
to Florence Abbott who proved a brilliant success.
The post of manager was abolished in 1875 and Miss Osburn's authority
in the Infirmary was never seriously challenged thereafter. The
Sydney Hospital Act of 1881 gave better administrative guidelines
despite an increase in size for an already overlarge board. But
the hospital remained difficult to work. Miss Osburn was not physically
strong. She had missed a third of her St Thomas's training through
illness and had come to Australia partly for health reasons. A series
of minor administrative crises during 1883-84 caused a breakdown
which led to her resignation in November 1884. She left in 1885
for London via the United States and later that year was inspecting
hospitals in Berlin.
During 1886-90 Lucy Osburn was attached to the Metropolitan and
National Nursing Association which supplied district nurses to the
sick poor in London. In 1888 she was a foundation council member
of the British Nursing Association. To her friend Lady Windeyer
(q.v.) she wrote: 'the difficulty is to arrange things upon a sufficiently
broad basis the doctors being determined to take the whole thing
into their own hands which if they do they will wreck it'. She wrote
also of returning to Australia but she never did. She died at Harrogate
on the 22 December 1891.
Ann M Mitchell
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