At twenty-three, high-spirited and courageous young Sue Barton goes to practice in the White Mountains - working with Dr. Bill Barry. Bill had proposed persistently and at last, gladly, Sue decides to marry him and help him with his country practice. But fate, in the form of personal tragedy, a typhoid epidemic, and the hostility of the town to Bill as a doctor, step in to complicate their lives. It is a wonder that a hurricane could lead not to further tragedy but to a potentially exciting future for Sue, Bill, and all of Springdale.
Sue Barton Staff Nurse
With her student days behind her and her career well underway, Sue and Bill, now married, together try to run a little hospital in the New England hills that was presented to the community by the town's wealthiest citizen, Elias Todd.
The seven book set includes: Sue Barton, Student Nurse Sue Barton, Senior Nurse Sue Barton, Visiting Nurse Sue Barton, Rural Nurse Sue Barton, Superintendent of Nurses Sue Barton, Neighborhood Nurse, and Sue Barton, Staff Nurse.
A groundbreaking look at marriage, one of the most basic and universal of all human institutions, which reveals the emotional, physical, economic, and sexual benefits that marriage brings to individuals...
0-486-28720-3 THE BUNGALOW BOOK: Floor Plans and Photos of 112 Houses, 1910, Henry L. Wilson. Here are 112 of the most popular and economic blueprints of the early 20th century — plus an illustration or photograph of each completed ...
This work builds on the foundation set out by The Future of Nursing: Leading Change, Advancing Health (2011) report.
Sue Barton left her position as Superintendent of Nurses at the Springdale, New Hampshire Hospital in order to raise a family.
She lives alone, has a job, and has never been married. It’s the first day of school when this story begins, and Blanche is eager to see how her daughter, Bunny, has fared away from home.
Then they saw Matron coming and they shot into the nearest ward. leaving Hale sitting in the bag. She didn't know why they had stopped so she stood up to see what was happening and found Matron looking at her.
In her study titled, “Margaret Shanks, Nurse to Susan B. Anthony: Exploring the Extraordinary in the 'Ordinary' Nurse,” Marshall (2009) explores the “ordinary” life of Margaret Shanks, the private duty nurse who nursed the famous ...