Finding Aid for the Madelaine Endicott Boutrell Red Cross Surgical Dressings Lecture Notes Biomed.0318

Finding aid prepared by Kelly Besser, 2021.
UCLA Library Special Collections
Online finding aid last updated 2021 January 19.
Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library
Box 951575
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1575
spec-coll@library.ucla.edu


Contributing Institution: UCLA Library Special Collections
Title: Madelaine Endicott Boutrell Red Cross Surgical Dressings lecture notes
Creator: Boutrell, Madelaine Endicott
Identifier/Call Number: Biomed.0318
Physical Description: 1 unknown (1 volume)
Date (inclusive): 1917 April 14-1917 May 1
Language of Material: English .

Conditions Governing Access

Open for research. All requests to access special collections materials must be made in advance using the request button located on this page.

UCLA Catalog Record ID

UCLA Catalog Record ID: 5490773 

Scope and Contents

Collection consists of manuscript belonging to Madelaine Endicott Boutrell, 17 Bay State Road, Boston, containing lecture notes from a course of seven lessons on surgical dressing and wound care, taken between 14 April 1917 and 1 May 1917, at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital and elsewhere in Boston. The course begins with a section entitled "Material: cost and source of supply" (including costs and the names of several suppliers), before highlighting various dressings, gauzes, compresses, fracture pillows, etc., to be used in the field. Although possibly already a student nurse at the hospital, it also is conceivable that Boutrell's enlisting in the Red Cross course was prompted by Woodrow Wilson's "War Message" to a special session of Congress, delivered twelve days before she began the class, that led to the overwhelming passage of the War Resolution to bring the United States into World War I. In 1916 the Women's Bureau of the Red Cross recruited women across the United States to make surgical dressings for sister societies in war-torn Europe. The American Red Cross Production Corps expanded the program in 1917 to meet the needs of the American military.