Royal College of Nursing - Presidents

Presidents

  • 1922-1925 Sidney Browne
  • 1925-1927 Sarah Swift
  • 1927-1929 Annie Warren Gill
  • 1929-1930 R. Cox-Davies
  • 1930-1933 M. E. Sparshott
  • 1933-1934 Edith MacGregor Rome
  • 1934-1935 R. Cox-Davies
  • 1935-1937 D S Goode
  • 1937-1938 Edith MacGregor Rome
  • 1938-1940 B. M. Monk
  • 1940-1942 M. Jones
  • 1942-1944 E. E. P. MacManus
  • 1944-1946 M. F. Hughes
  • 1946-1948 G. V. L. Hillyers
  • 1948-1950 Louisa Wilkinson
  • 1950-1952 Lucy Duff-Grant
  • 1952-1954 L. J. Ottley
  • 1954-1956 S. C. Bovill
  • 1956-1958 G. M. Godden
  • 1958-1960 M. J. Marriott
  • 1960-1962 M. J. Smith
  • 1962-1963 M. J. Marriott
  • 1963-1964 M. G. Lawson
  • 1964-1966 Florence Udell
  • 1966-1968 Theodora Turner
  • 1968-1972 Mary Blakeley
  • 1972-1976 Winifred Prentice
  • 1976-1980 Eirlys M Rees
  • 1981-1982 Marian K Morgan
  • 1982-1987 Sheila Quinn
  • 1988-1990 Maude Storey
  • 1990-1994 June Clark
  • 1994-1998 Betty Kershaw
  • 1999-2000 Christine Watson
  • 2000-2002 Roswyn Hakesley-Brown
  • 2002-2006 Sylvia Denton
  • 2006-2010 Maura Buchanan
  • 2010- Andrea Spyropoulos

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Famous quotes containing the word presidents:

    You must drop all your democracy. You must not believe in “the people.” One class is no better than another. It must be a case of Wisdom, or Truth. Let the working classes be working classes. That is the truth. There must be an aristocracy of people who have wisdom, and there must be a Ruler: a Kaiser: no Presidents and democracies.
    —D.H. (David Herbert)

    Governments can err, Presidents do make mistakes, but the immortal Dante tells us that divine justice weighs the sins of the cold-blooded and the sins of the warm-hearted in different scales. Better the occasional faults of a Government that lives in a spirit of charity than the constant omission of a Government frozen in the ice of its own indifference.
    Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882–1945)

    Our presidents have been getting to be synthetic monsters, the work of a hundred ghost- writers and press agents so that it is getting harder and harder to discover the line between the man and the institution.
    John Dos Passos (1896–1970)