Alice Gregory
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{{Infobox person
| name = Alice Gregory
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| birth_name =
| birth_date = 22 November 1867
| birth_place = Lambeth, England
| death_date = {{death-date and age|8 November 1946|22 November 1867}}
| death_place = Alfriston, England
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| other_names =
| known_for = founding British Hospital for Mothers and Babies
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| employer =
| occupation = midwife, hospital manager
| parents = Robert Gregory
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Alice Sophia Gregory (22 November 1867 – 8 November 1946) was a British midwife who founded the British Hospital for Mothers and Babies to create professional training for midwives.
Life
Gregory was born in Lambeth in 1867. Her parents were Charlotte Anne (born Stopford) and Robert Gregory. Her father was in the Church of England and in time he would be the dean of St Paul's Cathedral. She was their last of three daughters who survived them. She had half brothers from her father's first marriage.June Hannam, ‘Gregory, Alice Sophia (1867–1946)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/56453, accessed 29 April 2017]
Gregory intended to ensure that all midwives were trained. She wanted to end the idea of a "handywoman" (cf traditional birth attendant) who would assist home births.{{cite book|author1=Billie Hunter|author2=Nicky Leap|title=The Midwife's Tale: An Oral History from Handywoman to Professional Midwife|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fC8RBQAAQBAJ&pg=PT146|date=17 October 2013|publisher=Pen and Sword|isbn=978-1-4738-2998-5|pages=146–}} The Home for Mothers and Babies in Wood Street, Woolwich opened in May 1905 due to her efforts which was assisted by the local Rector of Woolwich Charles Escreet. She was assisted by Leila Parnell and Maud Cashmere. The hospital soon had twelve beds but it first opened with just six beds. Its purpose was to provide a service and to establish a training location for midwives. This hospital amalgamated in 1915 with the British Lying-In Hospital, Holborn.
In 1916 Gregory as "Honorary Secretary of the British Hospital for Mothers and Babies" gave evidence before the commission on venereal diseases (sexually transmitted infections). She argued to lengthen the training of midwives, which was then six months for a nurse and a year for a new application. She noted that babies had died because midwives were unaware of these diseases and on occasions the midwives spread and rarely themselves caught the disease. The stigma of this meant that this was not openly discussed.[http://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk/data/VOLUME056-1916/page239-volume56-11thmarch1916.pdf The Training of Midwives], 11 March 1916, British Journal of Nursing supplement, RCNArchive, Retrieved 30 April 2017
During World War II the hospital was damaged in a bombing raid in 1940.[http://archiveshub.ac.uk/data/gb1538-rcms?page=12 Archives Hub > RCMS - Royal College of Midwives Special Collections > Papers of Pamela Daymond > British Hospital for Mothers and Babies: Attendance registers] Alice Gregory was still working at the hospital and she arranged for a new wing which was opened by the Princess Royal in 1944. Gregory retired on medical grounds in June 1944 and went to live with Maud Cashmere. She died in retirement in their house near Alfriston in November 1946.
References
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