Anna DeCosta Banks explained

Anna DeCosta Banks
Birth Date:September 2, 1869
Birth Place:Charleston, South Carolina, U.S.
Education:Hampton Institute, 1891
Hampton Institute Dixie Hospital of Nursing, 1895
Occupation:Nurse

Anna DeCosta Banks (September 2, 1869 – November 29, 1930) was an American nurse, and the first head nurse at the Hospital and Training School for Nurses in Charleston, South Carolina. Banks is known for her nursing career, as well as a later position as superintendent for 32 years at the same training school for nurses. Specifically designed for women of color, this hospital was later renamed McClennan-Banks Memorial Hospital in her honor.

Personal life

Banks was the daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth DeCosta.[1] She married Issiah Banks, and in 1889 she gave birth to Evangeline Banks Harrison in Hampton, Virginia.[2] Harrison went on to become the Medical Records Librarian at McClennan-Banks Memorial Hospital, which was partly named in honor of her mother.[3]

Early life and education

Anna DeCosta Banks was born on September 2, 1869, in Charleston, South Carolina. She attended Charleston Public Schools for her primary education. In 1891 she graduated from Hampton Institute, now known as Hampton University, in Virginia, where she was one of the first students to earn a diploma.[4] [5] Afterwards, she enrolled in Hampton's Dixie Hospital of Nursing, where she was one of the school's first graduates.[6]

Career

Banks was the first head nurse at the Hospital and Training School for Nurses in Charleston, South Carolina, located at 135 Cannon Street. This hospital was later renamed to McClennan-Banks Memorial Hospital. She became the Superintendent of Nurses, a position she held for 32 years.[7] Throughout her career she focused on seeking more equitable health care for African Americans, caring for many impoverished African-American patients while only charging them the cost of board and medicine.[8]

Additionally, Banks wrote an article in 1899 regarding the issues African-American nurses faced for the Hampton Training School for Nurses and Dixie Hospital. At this time, segregation affected where African-American nurses were able to work. Banks stressed the need for funding and donations at various hospitals to provide practical training for African-American nurses.[9]

Meanwhile, Banks also privately worked as a visiting public-health nurse for the Ladies Benevolent Society for Charleston.[10] She served this society for twenty-four years and as a collector interacting with black policyholders for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.

Legacy

When Banks died, the community honored her with the tribute: "All ages, classes, races, called her blessed". Banks had such a significant effect on nursing within the state of South Carolina that the Medical University of South Carolina named a wing of their hospital after her.[11] In 1930, Banks passed away and was known as the oldest nurse working in South Carolina at the time.[12] In addition, the name of the Hospital and Training School for Nurses was changed to McClennan-Banks Hospital. However, this hospital closed in 1977.[13]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: January 2004 . Anna DeCosta Banks, RN . January 19, 2017 . South Carolina African American.
  2. Web site: Walker . Donna Isbell . February 3, 2015 . Anna DeCosta Banks spent her life caring for those in need . January 25, 2017 . Greenville Online.
  3. Web site: Inventory of the Helen Evangeline Banks Harrison Papers, circa 1850 - 1985 . 2017-02-09 . avery.cofc.edu.
  4. Book: Buhler-Wilkerson, Karen. No Place Like Home. The Johns Hopkins University Press. 2001. 0-8018-7318-5. Baltimore, Maryland. 72–79.
  5. Web site: Banks, Anna DeCosta. Schafer. Elizabeth D.. May 17, 2016. South Carolina Encyclopedia. University of South Carolina, Institute for Southern Studies. January 26, 2017.
  6. Web site: Anna DeCosta Banks, RN. January 2004. South Carolina African American. January 19, 2017.
  7. Web site: 2017 . Anna DeCosta Banks . January 10, 2017 . Hospital and Training School for Nurses McClennan-Banks Memorial Hospital.
  8. Web site: January 2004 . Anna DeCosta Banks, RN . January 19, 2017 . South Carolina African American.
  9. Web site: Schafer . Elizabeth D. . May 17, 2016 . Banks, Anna DeCosta . January 26, 2017 . South Carolina Encyclopedia . University of South Carolina, Institute for Southern Studies.
  10. Web site: Walker . Donna Isbell . February 3, 2015 . Anna DeCosta Banks spent her life caring for those in need . February 9, 2017 . Detroit Free Press.
  11. Web site: Walker . Donna Isbell . February 3, 2015 . Anna DeCosta Banks spent her life caring for those in need . January 25, 2017 . Greenville Online.
  12. Web site: Schafer . Elizabeth D. . May 17, 2016 . Banks, Anna DeCosta . January 26, 2017 . South Carolina Encyclopedia . University of South Carolina, Institute for Southern Studies.
  13. Web site: 2017 . Anna DeCosta Banks: First African-American Head Nurse of the Hospital and Training School for Nurses . Black Then.