Mary Eliza Mahoney: First Black Professional Nurse in America
Posted on 11. Jan, 2010 by Leshell Hatley in Nursing, Scholarly Celebrations
Mary Eliza Mahoney was the first black professional nurse in America, and an active organizer among African American nurses. She was born in Boston, on May 7, 1845, the oldest of three children. At the age of 18, she decided to pursue a career in nursing, working at the progressive New England Hospital for Women and Children.
Education
In 1878, at age 33, she was accepted in that hospital’s nursing school, the first professional nursing program in the country. Of the 42 students who started that year, Mahoney was one of just four who graduated the next year. The training required 12 months in the hospital’s medical, surgical, and maternity wards, lectures and instruction by doctors on the ward, as well as four months of work as a private-duty nurse.
Career
After graduation, Mahoney registered for work as a private-duty nurse. Families that employed Mahoney praised her calm and quiet efficiency. Her professionalism helped raise the status of all nurses. At a time when nurses were often assigned domestic chores as well as nursing duties, she refused to take her meals with household staff. As he reputation spread, Mahoney received requests from patients as far away as New Jersey, Washington, D.C., and North Carolina.
Mahoney was one of the first black members of the organization that later became the American Nurses Association (A.N.A.). When that later organization proved slow to admit black nurses, Mahoney strongly supported the establishment of the National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses (N.A.C.G.N.), and delivered the welcome address at that organization’s first annual convention, in 1909. In that speech, Mahoney recognized the inequalities in nursing education and called for a demonstration at the New England Hospital to have more African American students admitted. The conference members responded by electing her to be association chaplain and giving her a lifetime membership.
For over a decade after that, Mahoney helped recruit nurses to joint the organization.
In 1911 she took the helm at the Howard Orphan Asylum in New York, and served there for over a year.
The New England Hospital for Women and Children is now the Dimock Center and now sponsors a Family Center in the Mary Eliza Mahoney House.
Women’s Right To Vote!
Mahoney was deeply concerned with women’s equality and a strong supporter of the movement to gain women the right to vote. When that movement succeeded with the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920, she was among the first women in Boston to register to vote — at the age of 76.
Mahoney contracted breast cancer in 1923 and died in 1926. Her grave in Everett, Massachusetts, is the site of national pilgrimages. In 1936, the N.A.C.G.N. established an award in her honor (later continued by the A.N.A.) to raise the status of black nurses. She was inducted into the A.N.A.’s Hall of Fame in 1976.
Equality
The effort for equality that Mahoney launched continued. From about 2,400 in 1910, the number of African American women in nursing had more than doubled by 1930, four years after Mahoney’s death.
The Founding of Mary Mahoney Professional Nurses Organization

Mary Mahoney Nurses Club, founders, pictured standing left to right: Mary Martin, Ira Gordon, Mary Davis Hooks, Ernestine Williams, Gertrude Dawson, Maxine Pitter Haynes, Rachel S. Pitts, and Katie Ashford. Seated left to right: Anne Foy Baker, Sadie Berrysmith Wallace, Juanita Davis and Celestine Thomas. Not shown: Mary Lanier. (Photographed by Chester Berrysmith)
In 1949 Anne Foy Baker invited 12 registered nurses to her home. She wanted these nurses to meet one another and to decide if they wanted to establish a professional organization. Under her leadership they established Mary Mahoney Registered Nurse Club, now Mary Mahoney Professional Nurses Organization (MMPNO). The principal purposes of this organization were to (1) provide information and support to one another, and (2) provide scholarship support to students who desired to pursue studies leading to careers in nursing.
The primary mission of the Mary Mahoney Professional Nurses Organization is to provide financial aid and scholarships to students of African heritage who pursue studies leading to careers in professional nursing.
Our goals are to:
- Promote recruitment, retention and graduation of African heritage students in nursing programs.
- Foster personal and professional career development of MMPNO members.
- Enhance physical and psychosocial well-being of under-served people.
- Encourage non-partisan political activity that is designed to positively impact the above goals.
Membership is open to any registered nurse of African heritage who is committed to the mission and goals of this organization. Monthly meetings are held on the first Saturday of each month, September through June.
More Related posts:
- Mary Ann Shadd Cary: Educator, Activist, 1st African-American Woman Editor in North America and 1st to enroll in Howard University Law School
- Ruth Simmons: 1st Black President of an Ivy League School
- [ HBCU_PRESIDENTS ] Dr. Mary Sias: Kentucky State University
- [ HBCU_Presidents ] Mary McLeod Bethune, Bethune-Cookman College
- 100 African-American Inventors!
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May 10, 2011
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barbarajayne bolling
18. Mar, 2010
I was inspired by her persistent for equality,and professional status for women of color who wanted to become registered nurses. Some of the same deterrents exsist in this 21st century . Some universities have coded applications to determine if we are “black” and admit only a certian number of “black” nurses into their programs. I discovered during my history that :white students” had be given the core nursing ,care plans,test, and preparation before we began college courses. I gain strength to continue my goals. I am a registered nurse,public health nurse and a pediatric nurse practitioner. Thank you Mary Mahoney