Godfrey Nurse papers
- Title
- Godfrey Nurse papers, 1932-1937.
- Author
Available online
Items in the library and off-site
Displaying 1 item
Status | Format | Access | Call number | Item location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Status Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Schomburg Center to submit a request in person. | FormatMixed material | AccessUse in library | Call numberSc Micro R-4843 | Item locationSchomburg Center - Research & Reference |
Details
- Description
- 1 microfilm reel.
- Summary
- The Godfrey Nurse Papers pertain to his political career as a member of the Electoral College in 1932 and 1936.
- Donor/Sponsor
- Schomburg NEH Automated Access to Special Collections Project.
- Subject
- Call number
- Sc MG 350
- Additional formats (note)
- Microfilmed;
- Biography (note)
- Godfrey Nurse, a surgeon who practiced in Harlem for over fifty years, was instrumental in the establishment and support of two hospitals in the late 1920's, the Edgecombe Sanitorium and the International Hospital, which provided facilities for black physicians and surgeons when all other New York hospitals were barred to them.
- Indexes/finding aids (note)
- Partial inventory available.
- Processing action (note)
- Accessioned
- Scrapbooks microfilmed then dissassembled.
- Cataloged
- Author
- Nurse, Godfrey, 1888-1967.
- Title
- Godfrey Nurse papers, 1932-1937.
- Additional formats
- Microfilmed; New York Public Library; call number, Sc Micro R-4843.
- Access
- Researchers restricted to microfilm.
- Biography
- Godfrey Nurse, a surgeon who practiced in Harlem for over fifty years, was instrumental in the establishment and support of two hospitals in the late 1920's, the Edgecombe Sanitorium and the International Hospital, which provided facilities for black physicians and surgeons when all other New York hospitals were barred to them. Born in Guyana, Nurse received the M.D. degree in 1914 from the Long Island College of Medicine. In the 1920's he established the Godfrey Nurse Research Laboratory, which was the first clinical laboratory operated by a black person to be certified by the Health Department. As head of the Manhattan Medical Society, composed of black physicians, Nurse was a leader in the successful efforts for the admission of black doctors to Harlem Hospital. In 1956 he donated $100,000 to that hospital for equipment and operation of a laboratory for surgical investigation.
- Active in the Democratic Party, Nurse was the first black elector in the Democratic Party and the first black presidential elector from New York State. As a delegate to the first State Democratic Convention, with Commissioner Thomas E. Dyett, he secured the first endorsement in the state platform of the Wagner-Costigan Anti-Lynching Bill.
- Indexes
- Partial inventory available.
- Connect to:
- Research call number
- Sc MG 350
- Sc Micro R-4843