The founder of Mary Mahoney Registered Nurses Club (now Mary Mahoney Professional
Nurses Organization). In 1879 Mary Eliza Mahoney graduated from the New England
Hospital for Women and Children in Boston, MA as the first colored graduate nurse
in the United States. In 1949, Anne and a schoolmate, Celestine Thomas, found the
names and telephone numbers of eleven other Negro Registered Nurses who lived and
worked in Seattle. They called and invited each nurse to attend a meeting at Anne's
home. In a single afternoon, 13 nurses met one another and agreed to form the Mary
Mahoney Registered Nurses Club.
The main purpose for establishing this organization was to promote the personal
and professional development of members. Anne remained an active and influential
leader of this organization throughout her lifetime, even though she lived for many
years in Greensboro, NC. She referred to her practice of nursing as a calling similar
to the way men in her time referred to being called to the ministry. Anne shifted
the focus of her nursing practice to reflect her physical and mental abilities.
When she became bedridden in 1998 she established a telephone ministry, where she
provided prayer and spiritual healing to anyone who called her for these services.
Throughout her lifetime, Anne demonstrated a commitment to professional nursing
and to our professional nurses' organization where she exhibited vision, leadership
and creativity. Her life and career reflected the highest standards of professionalism
in nursing.
2008 Inductees