- Louisa Stevenson
Louisa Stevenson (1835–1908) was a Scottish campaigner for women's university education, women's suffrage and effective, well-organised nursing.
Family
Born in
Glasgow on15 July 1835 to James (1786–1866) and Jane Stevenson, Louisa was one of a large family including her fellow-campaigner and sister Flora, the architect John James Stevenson, and MPJames Cochran Stevenson . The family moved toEdinburgh shortly before Mrs Stevenson died in 1854, and in 1859 settled in a house in Randolph Crescent where Louisa, Flora, Elisa Stevenson (1829–1904), an early suffragist, and Jane Stevenson (1828–1904) spent the rest of their lives. Jane was a strong influence within the family but did not join in her sisters' activities beyond the home. After their father died leaving them comfortably-off they were able to contribute financially to various causes.Education and nursing
Louisa Stevenson was a member of the Edinburgh Ladies' Educational Association (which later became the
Edinburgh Association for the University Education of Women or EAUEW) and in 1868 she and Flora attended the first course of lectures for women given by ProfessorDavid Masson . This was the time whenSophia Jex-Blake was starting her campaign to open up medical education to women and Stevenson was honorary treasurer of a committee formed to support Jex-Blake and help with her legal costs. Stevenson's role in the EAUEW led to her giving evidence to a Commission on University Education, so contributing to the Universities (Scotland) Act 1889 which meant that Scottish universities were open to women students from 1892. This led to fund-raising for a women's hall of residence atEdinburgh University , the Masson Hall, which opened in 1897 with Louisa Stevenson as honorary secretary.She also contributed to education by co-founding the Edinburgh School of Cookery with Christian Edington Guthrie Wright (1844–1907) and encouraging the establishment of similar schools in other towns. The Edinburgh School was a forerunner of
Queen Margaret University .Stevenson took a particular interest in the standard of nursing at the
poorhouse in her position as the first femalepoor law guardian in the city. She helped manage the Jubilee Nurses Institute (forDistrict Nurse s) and the Colonial Nursing Organisation (nurses needed in various parts of theBritish Empire ), and was also President of the Society for the State Registration of Trained Nurses.Other interests
While her sister Flora was one of the first women ever to serve on a school board, Louisa was one of the first women elected to a hospital board, and her work was so valuable that she changed the attitude of one male board member who had at first been opposed to the idea of a woman helping to run the
Edinburgh Royal Infirmary . She believed that women's qualifications for helping with hospital management were equal to men's though each sex might bring somewhat different experience to the task.All her life, Louisa Stevenson supported the cause of
women's suffrage and she was an executive committee member of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies in the 1890s. In the last years of her life she metPrime Minister Henry Campbell-Bannerman as part of a deputation of women's suffragists, and in that same year, 1906, she received an honorary degree ofLLD from Edinburgh University. She died on13 May 1908 , at home in Edinburgh.The British Journal of Nursing attributed her success in everything she did to her "genial courtesy", "indomitable perseverance" and a "thorough grasp of the subject in hand".
ources
*"Oxford Dictionary of National Biography"
* [http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME029-1902/page008-volume29-5thjuly-1902.pdf "British Journal of Nursing"5 July 1902]
*"Scotsman" obituary,14 May 1908 External links
* [http://www.qmuc.ac.uk/quality/core/ee/aboutQMUC.htm Edinburgh Cookery School]
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