A Nun with a Gun, Sister Stanislaus

A Biography

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, Christianity, Education, Christian Life
Cover of the book A Nun with a Gun, Sister Stanislaus by Eddie Doherty, Papamoa Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Eddie Doherty ISBN: 9781789120677
Publisher: Papamoa Press Publication: March 12, 2018
Imprint: Papamoa Press Language: English
Author: Eddie Doherty
ISBN: 9781789120677
Publisher: Papamoa Press
Publication: March 12, 2018
Imprint: Papamoa Press
Language: English

THIS is the story of a rare human being, a dynamo of a woman who devoted her life, joyfully, humorously, expertly, uniquely, to others.

Orphaned at 3, brought up by the Sisters of Charity in Nevada, a nun herself at 20, Sister Stanislaus, after several months of nurses’ training in Baltimore, was sent to work in New Orleans. She never really left. Her first, last, and only assignment was Charity Hospital, New Orleans. In time, the two became virtually synonymous.

She spent over fifty years there. When she arrived, Charity Hospital comprised one antiquated building; modern medicine was in its swaddling clothes; nursing was an even more hit-or-miss affair. When she left, Charity Hospital was one of the finest in the land and nursing had become a highly professional career.

Sister Stanislaus played a large part in the development of both. She brought to nursing a great and joyful zeal, an originality, and a love which affected everyone she came in contact with. Constantly perfecting herself as a nurse, she became one of the best known nursing-sisters in the country.

But she did not stop there. Changing, innovating, wheedling money from a string of politicos—from Huey Long and his predecessors by Earl Long—she built Charity Hospital into the great modern institution it is.

Yet her fame and her influence were not a result of her public achievement; they were based upon something more immediate, more spiritual. They grew from her all-embracing charity, her lifetime of devotion to the sick and the troubled. She was beloved as a person; the rest, an incredible array of activities and duties, accomplishment and concern, simply happened. Or so she pretended.

An extraordinary personality merges from this brisk, expertly written biography, a lively and highly original nun, nurse, and human being, full of surprises but indefatigably on the job, bringing relief and consolation to thousands who passed in and out of a great hospital.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

THIS is the story of a rare human being, a dynamo of a woman who devoted her life, joyfully, humorously, expertly, uniquely, to others.

Orphaned at 3, brought up by the Sisters of Charity in Nevada, a nun herself at 20, Sister Stanislaus, after several months of nurses’ training in Baltimore, was sent to work in New Orleans. She never really left. Her first, last, and only assignment was Charity Hospital, New Orleans. In time, the two became virtually synonymous.

She spent over fifty years there. When she arrived, Charity Hospital comprised one antiquated building; modern medicine was in its swaddling clothes; nursing was an even more hit-or-miss affair. When she left, Charity Hospital was one of the finest in the land and nursing had become a highly professional career.

Sister Stanislaus played a large part in the development of both. She brought to nursing a great and joyful zeal, an originality, and a love which affected everyone she came in contact with. Constantly perfecting herself as a nurse, she became one of the best known nursing-sisters in the country.

But she did not stop there. Changing, innovating, wheedling money from a string of politicos—from Huey Long and his predecessors by Earl Long—she built Charity Hospital into the great modern institution it is.

Yet her fame and her influence were not a result of her public achievement; they were based upon something more immediate, more spiritual. They grew from her all-embracing charity, her lifetime of devotion to the sick and the troubled. She was beloved as a person; the rest, an incredible array of activities and duties, accomplishment and concern, simply happened. Or so she pretended.

An extraordinary personality merges from this brisk, expertly written biography, a lively and highly original nun, nurse, and human being, full of surprises but indefatigably on the job, bringing relief and consolation to thousands who passed in and out of a great hospital.

More books from Papamoa Press

Cover of the book A Day on Cooper River by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book Wilderness-Spotsylvania Staff Ride Briefing Book [Illustrated Edition] by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book Change Your Life Through Love by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book Chasing Villa by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book Tough-Minded Management 1st ed. by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book This Was Railroading, Part 2 by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book Zachary Taylor by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book My Nameday by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book Four Years with Morgan and Forrest [Illustrated Edition] by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book The Marrying Americans by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book Opened Treasures by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book Go North, Young Man by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book Forts and Forays by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book Mr. Lincoln’s General, U.S. Grant by Eddie Doherty
Cover of the book South After Gettysburg by Eddie Doherty
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy