Irene Hall | |
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Born | 19 July 1888 |
Died | 11 August 1961 |
Nationality | Australia |
Occupation | hospital matron |
Employer | Royal Newcastle Hospital |
Known for | "synonymous with [her] institution" |
Irene Slater HallMBE (1888 – 1961) was an Australian hospital matron who over 40 years became "synonymous" with the formerRoyal Newcastle Hospital.
Hall was born in New South Wales atRyde in 1888. Her Australian born parents were Harriett (born Noakes) and her husband Moses Slater Hall - who worked on a farm. She was educated locally.[1]
Nellie Gould and Sister Julia Bligh Johnston ran the private Ermelo Private Hospital in Sydney.[2] Hall was a nurse there in 1907 before she began training atSydney Hospital the following year. She completed her training in 1913.[1]
In December 1914, Hall began work at theRoyal Newcastle Hospital as a deputy matron and in the following year she became the hospital's matron. She served for 43 years and her name was said to be "synonymous with the institution". She kept a rigid discipline with her nurses when they were training. She said her discipline was more rigorous than the British army.[1] When theMatrons' Handbook of Lectures to Trainees was published in 1935[3] she was the editor.[1]
She first attended theInternational Council of Nurses congress in 1937. She later went to the congress in Atlantic City in 1947.[1]
Under the hospital's innovative medical superintendent, Chris McCaffrey, introduced initially unpopular reforms to nursing made with the help of Hall.[4]
In 1957 she attended her last International Council of Nurses congress which was in Rome and she became aMember of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire.[1]
She retired in 1958.[1] In 1960 the Royal Newcastle Hospital'sIrene Hall Nurses' Home was opened in Newcastle.[5] Hall died in 1961 in theRoyal Newcastle Hospital.[1]