Florence Nightingale Museum

Florence Nightingale Museum

Florence Nightingale Museum

The Florence Nightingale Museum is located at St Thomas' Hospital, which faces the Palace of Westminster across the River Thames in South Bank, central London, England. It is open to the public seven days a week. It re-opened on May 12 2010 following an extensive £1.4m refurbishment.

The museum tells the real story of the lady with the lamp from her Victorian childhood to her experiences in the Crimean, through to her years as an ardent campaigner for health reform. Florence Nightingale, is recognised as the founder of modern nursing in the United Kingdom. The new museum explains her legacy and also celebrates nursing today.

In 1860, four years after her famous involvement in the Crimean War, Nightingale founded the Nightingale Training School for nurses at St. Thomas' Hospital and the museum is located on this site.

The new museum is designed around three exciting pavilions which tell her story:

  1. The Gilded Cage tells the story of her privileged childhood and her struggle against stifling social conventions.
  2. The Calling is dramatic and moving, explaining how Nightingale and her team coped with the crisis in the military hospitals where the legend of the lady with the lamp was born.
  3. Reform and Inspire shows the other side of Florence, the reformer who campaigned tirelessly for health reform at home and abroad.

Highlights from the Collection include:

  1. The writing slate Florence used as a child.
  2. Her pet little owl Athena which she rescued in Athens and hand reared, he became her constant companion, travelling everywhere in her pocket.
  3. Nightingale’s medicine chest which she took with her to the Crimean. Contains a mix of medicines and herbal remedies, from bicarbonate of soda to powdered rhubarb.
  4. A rare Register of Nurses which lists women who served under Nightingale in the military hospitals in Turkey and the Crimean.

Audio tours are free with entry and accessed via your own set of stethoscopes. New interactive exhibits have been created to offer different ways of exploring Florence's story and influence. Free creative activities for children are offered during the holidays.


There is also a resource centre which is open by appointment to students, academics and other researchers, who may utilise the museum's collections, books and documents related to Florence Nightingale. The museum is a member of the London Museums of Health & Medicine.


Source : en.wikipedia.org