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Photos from top to bottom:
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Cover of Seacole's
autobiography
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2005 Jamaican stamps
commemorating the 200th anniversary of Seacole's birth
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Mary Seacole was a dedicated nurse and a
great humanitarian. Though less famous than Florence
Nightingale, she was a heroine who risked her life to treat
soldiers in the Crimean War, as well as victims of cholera and
yellow fever in the Caribbean and Central America.
Mary Grant was born in Kingston, Jamaica in
1805. She got her love of nursing from her mother, who was
knowledgeable about folk medicine and cures, and had built
Blundell Hall in Kingston, where she nursed arm officers and
yellow fever patient. From the age of 12, she began to
help her mother. As a teenager, she travelled to many
countries, collecting information on plants and herbs used as
medicine, and developed her own cures.
In 1836, she married Edwin Seacole. In
1843, fire destroyed Blundell Hall. Although it was
rebuilt, this was followed by a greater tragedy when Seacole's
husband and mother passed away the following year. Seacole
took charge of the new Blundell Hall and continued her mother's
nursing mission.
During a cholera outbreak in Jamaica in 1850,
which killed over 32,000 people, Seacole saved many lives using
simple herbal medicines, and became highly respected for her
treatments. She also treated cholera victims in Panama and
yellow fever patients in Jamaica and Cuba. On hearing
about the Crimean War in which many soldiers were dying from
cholera and dysentery, she applied to join Florence
Nightingale's contingent, but was rejected because of the racial
prejudice at the time. In 1855, at age 50, she used her
own resources to open the British Hotel in Crimea to treat
injured soldiers. The hotel, which was built in two
months, became a refuge for soldiers on both sides of the
conflict. So courageous and committed was "Mother Seacole"
that she often went onto the battlefield to attend to the
wounded.
At the end of the war, Seacole returned to
London deeply in debt, but the British Commander-in-Chief of the
Crimean forces, in gratitude for her humanitarianism, helped her
financially. Seacole's outstanding work earned her great
recognition. Several buildings in the UK and Caribbean
have been named to honour her, and the Government of Jamaica
awarded her the Order of Merit.
Mary Seacole died in England on 14th May,
1881 at the age of 76.

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