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America's first black professional nurse, Mary Eliza Mahoney is known not only for her
outstanding personal career, but also for her exemplary contributions to local and national
professional organizations. Mahoney inspired both nurses and patients with her calm, quiet
efficiency and untiring compassion. Patients tended by Mahoney throughout her career gave
glowing testimony of her expert and tender care. She graduated from the New England Hospital
for Women and Children Training School for Nurses in 1879. She was one of only three persons
in her class to complete the rigorous 16 month program. In 1909, Mahoney gave the welcome
address at the first conference of the National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses
(NACGN). In recognition of her outstanding example to nurses of all races, NACGN established
the Mary Mahoney Award in 1936. When NACGN merged with the American Nurses
Association in 1951, the award was continued. Today, the Mary Mahoney Award is bestowed
biennially in recognition of significant contributions in interracial relationships.
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