The Halifax Disaster & the Boston Common Christmas
Tree
The story of the Halifax
Disaster and the Boston Common Christmas Tree is known to many and much has
been written about the disaster response from physicians and politicians. After
almost 100 years this story of war, international terrorist fears, devastating
urban disasters, unprecedented international relief response, and maritime
responsibility has much to teach us about contemporary debates. But it is also
a story of who responds across boundaries and why; how we see ourselves and
others in times of disaster; and how women and nurses are critical but often
invisible actors in any disaster response story. Dr. Deb Sampson tells this
story with a focus on the courage, compassion, and determination of the New
England nurses who boarded a train to travel into the unknown of one of the
worst urban explosion disasters of the 20th Century and the
gratitude of a city in Canada; gratitude that to this day is commemorated by
the Christmas tree on Boston Common. Dr. Sampson earned a PhD at the University
of Pennsylvania where she was a National Institutes of Health Predoctoral
Fellow. Her research focuses on place, culture, health policy and professional
gendered boundaries. She has research, teaching, practice, and consulting
experience in Africa, Central America, and Southeast Asia and has had faculty
and administrative appointments at several universities, where she taught
across programs, including Yale, the University of Michigan, and the University
of Pennsylvania. She was a Senior Consultant at the Health Resources Services
Administration, US Department of Health and Human Services and is also former
trauma and ICU nurse, currently practicing occupational medicine nurse
practitioner and health care administrator. Free and open to all.
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