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Series
Catalogue reference: DT 10
DT 10
This series contains the Register of nurses and supplementary registers maintained by the General Nursing Council. The series contains a list of nurses (SRNs) from 1921 to 1973. Although the register was opened in 1921 it includes details of...
DT 10
1921-1973
This series contains the Register of nurses and supplementary registers maintained by the General Nursing Council.
The series contains a list of nurses (SRNs) from 1921 to 1973. Although the register was opened in 1921 it includes details of nurses who qualified previous to this.
Printed nominal indexes are in DT 10/1-56.
DT 10/201 contains the list of nurses which was opened under the 1943 Nurses Act to allow those who had failed to register under the provisions of 1919 to do so.
Numerical.
The list of nurses who had completed a course of training before July 1925 is contained in one volume with manuscript entries. It dates from January 1944 to September 1949 and nurses are listed in the same divisions as the general and supplementary parts of the register.
Not Public Record(s)
English
201 volume(s)
Open
The General Nursing Council (GNC) was required by the Nurses Act 1919 to 'form and keep a Register of Nurses for the sick.' Early council meetings discussed the training and experience required by a properly qualified nurse. The register was opened on 30 September 1921 and was divided into the general part, reserved for female nurses, with supplementary parts for fever nurses, male nurses, mental nurses (with a special section for nurses for mental defectives) and sick children's nurses. The Nurses Act 1949 amalgamated the male nurses part with the general part of the register and the Fever Register was closed on 31 December 1967 when it was felt there was no further need for this specialization.
After the Nurses Act 1949 the council was given the power to consider applications for admission to the register from nurses trained outside the United Kingdom. Manuscript entries were made in the register books until December 1966 after which they were typed. Since 1973 the register has been stored on computer. The books were continuously updated to include new information such as change of name by marriage or removal from the register for non-payment of the retaining fee (until its abolition by the Nurses Act 1949) or following disciplinary procedure.
When the register was first opened, existing nurses were allowed to register before the end of 1923. After that time nurses were only registered after passing recognised examinations. Many thousands of properly trained nurses failed to register within the allotted time. Proposals to open the register for one year to admit these nurses were first put forward in 1933, but not until the Nurses Act 1943 was the GNC instructed to keep a list. The Act specified that nurses who could produce a certificate that they had completed a course of training before the beginning of July 1925 should be entered on the list.
Records of the General Nursing Council for England and Wales
General Nursing Council for England and Wales: Registration: The Register of Nurses
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