24 Hour Museum - official guide to UK museums, galleries, exhibitions and heritage
Gateway to Over 3,000 UK museums, galleries and heritage attractions
Skip to navigation

Exhibitions

MGM 2005: Mary Seacole At The Florence Nightingale Museum

By Kate Honeyford

12/05/2005

Image: shows a picture of a woman dressed as Mary Seacole and a man standing at a podium

Sir Trevor McDonald OBE opens the Mary Seacole Bicentenary exhibition, with actress Nina Baden-Semper as Mary Seacole. Picture courtesy Florence Nightingale Museum.

Pausing to pick up a lamp, Kate Honeyford made her way up to the London to visit the Florence Nightingale Museum.

A Mary Seacole Bicentenary exhibition at the Florence Nightingale Museum was opened on May 10 2005 by newscaster Sir Trevor McDonald.

The museum is small, the exhibition is tiny - but its impact is huge.

Mary Seacole has been known as the black Florence Nightingale and, like her more famous nursing colleague, also travelled to the Crimea, playing an important part in the development of modern nursing and the treatment of wounded and sick soldiers.

Alex Attewell, museum director, explained why the exhibition is so important. “The exhibition is very much a partnership project. One of our partners is Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and the Royal College of Nursing and they approach this from a professional development view, history that promotes management diversity.”

Image: shows a scan of a felt tip drawing of Mary Seacole with the words determination.

One of the drawings produced for the exhibition in workshops with local schools. Picture courtesy Florence Nightingale Museum.

Because of her Afro-Caribbean heritage, Seacole had learned how to treat the diseases that troops succumbed to abroad such as cholera and yellow fever - knowledge unknown to the army doctors working in the Crimea.

Not only a skilful nurse, she was an independent traveller and an entrepreneur; she could be a model for modern businesswoman in the way she used her influential contacts. “When she died, she left her pearls, not to her sister, but to Count Gleichen, a cousin of Queen Victoria,” said Attewell.

Another partner in the exhibition is The Black Cultural Archive, an organisation that works to recover black history. “Rediscovering the story of Mary Seacole’s life is important to the identity of black people in this country,” added Attewell.

“She used to be remembered for the discrimination she faced. She is now beginning to be remembered for her achievements, for overcoming the obstacles. She would have preferred that.”

Image: shows a group photograph of smiling schoolchildren

Children from local schools have been integral in shaping the content of the new exhibition. Picture courtesy Florence Nightingale Museum.

In the corner of the exhibit stands a cabinet of herbs like the ones Seacole used. They are real and you can handle them. Poisons, like rhubarb leaf, are safely behind glass.

The Royal Pharmaceutical Society is an exhibition partner, in recognition of the contribution that African and Caribbean herbal medicine made to the development of modern drugs.

The Florence Nightingale Museum is in Lambeth, a London Borough where 25 percent of the population identify themselves as of Afro-Caribbean origin and the museum has been working with local schoolchildren.

The smiles on the faces of the six-year-old exhibition visitors trying on hats just like Seacole would have worn indicated they were having fun. There are workshops in schools for older children too.

Image: shows a drawing of a soldier on crutches - duplicated four times

Another drawing produced from workshops involving local schools. Picture courtesy: Florence Nightingale Museum.

Exhibitions like this are helping to make sure we include everyone who has contributed to British history and culture. Some things are beginning to change already. Speaking about his experience of a recent school workshop, Attewell said, “One child asked ‘Who is Florence Nightingale?’ ‘The white Mary Seacole,’ another child replied.”

Image: Shows the Museums and Galleries Month logo.

Kate Honeyford is participating in the 24 Hour Museum/ MGM Arts Writing Prize 2005.

Florence Nightingale Museum
Florence Nightingale Museum, St. Thomas' Hospital, 2 Lambeth Palace Road, London, SE1 7EW, England

Open: Mon - Fri 10.00am-5.00pm Sat, Sun & Bank Holidays 10.00am-5.00pm
Closed: Closed Good Friday, Easter Saturday, Easter Sunday, 24 December - 2 January (inclusive)

Related Articles

Finding Mary Seacole In London
Museum Launches Appeal To Find Identity Of Mystery Nurses
Florence Nightingale - The Lady With The Lamp And A Mission
Florence Nightingale Museum Hopes To Buy Her Pet Owl

E-news registration
E-mail story to a friend
Tell us what you think

Wildlife Photographer of the Year At Natural History Museum

Future 50 - Top Online Axis Artists In Leeds Exhibition

Yoko Ono Takes Her Love To Tyneside For BALTIC Show

Shetland Museum Unveils Evocative First World War Collection

Sisley In England And Wales At London's National Gallery

Darwin And His Big Idea At The Natural History Museum London

Babylon: Myth Or Reality? At The British Museum

The Hub's Guitars, Made In Britain, Played All Over The World

Interactive Map Explores Coastal Communities At Jaywick, Essex

The Post Office During WWI At The Cabinet War Rooms

St. Barbe Museum Hosts The Women's Land Army - A Portrait

Oliver Clegg's Night's Move At The Freud Museum London

New Walk Museum Hosts Ernest Gimson & The Arts And Craft Movement

Paths To Fame: Turner Watercolours From The Courtauld

National Portrait Gallery - Annie Leibovitz: A Photographer's Life

Disposable People - Slavery Exposed At Southbank Centre

Soho Of The 1950s And 1960s At Photographers' Gallery

Eileen Agar: An Eye For Collage At Pallant House Gallery

Search this site

Advanced Search
Map Search

Home Page
News Page
Exhibition Page
What's On
Trails Page
Website of the Week
Letters Page
Welsh Home
Graphical Version

Skip to body

Copyright © 24 Hour Museum
Information published here was believed to be correct at the time it was prepared. Welsh language pages developed with CYMAL: Museums Archives and Libraries Wales, funded by the Welsh Assembly Government.

Skip to navigation
Go to top