Skip to content
Home
Favourites
0
Advanced search
Shopping cart
0
Register
Log in
Images of Edinburgh
Browse map
Area A - Z
Browse by date
Exhibitions
Current exhibition
All exhibitions
Collections
About the collections
Browse by theme
Subject A - Z
The image library for the collections of Edinburgh Libraries and Museums and Galleries
Images of Edinburgh
Browse map
Area A - Z
Browse by date
Exhibitions
Current exhibition
All exhibitions
Collections
About the collections
Browse by theme
Subject A - Z
Page 231 from Ethel Moir Diary, Vol 1
Moir, Ethel, 1916, Document
Page 231 from Ethel Moir Diary, Vol 1
Page 231 from Ethel Moir Diary, Vol 1
Add to favourites
Share
Item record
About this image
Related
Location
Category
Library Item
Item no
25259
Title
Page 231 from Ethel Moir Diary, Vol 1
Description
Newspaper cutting:
Under the auspices of the Lord Mayor, the London memorial to Dr Elsie Inglis, founder of the Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign
Service, was inaugurated at a largely attended meeting at the Mansion-House this afternoon. The platform party included the Earl of
Selborne, Lady Frances Balfour, the Serbian Minister, and Commander Locker Lampson. The Executive Committee of the London units
of the Scottish Women's Hospitals are appealing for a fund to establish a chair of medicine in the University of Belgrade after the war, as a memorial to Dr Elsie Inglis. Lord Selborne spoke of the appropriateness of connecting a chair of medicine in the capital of Serbia with the life work of that noble lady, the last three years of whose life were spent for the Serbian people. Lady Frances Balfour, who is now engaged writing the life of Dr Elsie Inglis, referred in an appreciative and eloquent speech to the remarkable qualities of head and heart which characterised her. She had a mind clear, consistent, strenuous. She knew what she wanted, and she always achieved her object. She had also what was, perhaps, rare - the power of delegating authority, trusting people, and getting the work done; and, above all, she had to a great degree faith, courage, and patience -
Artist / maker
Moir, Ethel
Date
1916
Size
20.4 x 16.0 cm
Type
Document
Location
Edinburgh and Scottish Collection
Continued from Description :
the faith which removed mountains. Dr Inglis was a visionary through certain powers which she possessed from her earliest years, a
purity of spirit, and an undying love of humanity. Her passionate love of liberty enabled her to enter into the lives, history, and thoughts of a nation like Serbia in no common degree. A memorial to this noble woman was to be most appropriately raised in Serbia, and Lady Frances Balfour expressed the hope that, in the first instance, at least, and perhaps during the ages, it would be a woman who occupied the chair of medicine in the University. She did not think there was any message we could send to the stricken country of Serbia which would be more abiding from generation to generation than this chair of healing which we would set up in their midst. The sum of £1715 was subscribed at the meeting.
Exhibitions with this item
There's a Long Long Trail A-Winding - vol 1
Other views of this item
Related images
Related subjects
Events
>
Wars
>
Wars
Events
>
Wars
>
World wars
Healthcare and welfare
>
Healthcare and welfare facilities
>
Scottish Women's Hospitals
People
>
Health and safety
>
Nurses
More like this