Ebba Boström Explained

Birth Name:Ebba Augusta Boström
Birth Date:5 September 1844
Birth Place:Östanå
Death Place:Uppsala
Resting Place:Gamla cemetery, Uppsala
Occupation:Nurse
Years Active:1881–1902

Ebba Boström (1844–1902) was a Swedish nurse and a philanthropist. She established a philanthropic centre in Uppsala which served the poor and children.

Early life and education

Boström was born in Östanå manor in Roslagen on 5 September 1844. He hailed from a noble family on her mother’s side, and her father was a judge. She had two sisters who married to the members of the noble von Bahr family. She also had two brothers: Erik Gustaf Boström, prime minister of Sweden between 1891 and 1900 and Filip August Boström, governor of Södermanland between 1887 and 1908.

She was trained at the Deaconess Institution of Milmay as a nurse in England. During her studies she became part of the Evangelical revival movement in London and Manchester.

Career

Boström returned to Sweden in 1882 following her graduation. She became the director of a morality association named Magdalenahem (Swedish: Magdalene home) for prostitutes in Uppsala in 1883. The same year she bought a property of her own to establish a philanthropic centre which would include a children’s home, a reform school for female servants, and a hospital. The latter was opened in 1893. She founded the Samariterhemmet foundation in Uppsala,[1] being a deaconess home in Sweden.[2] Later she handed over all of her philanthropic facilities to the foundation in 1899.[3]

Death

Boström died of kidney disease on 5 October 1902 and was buried at the Gamla cemetery in Uppsala.[4] [5]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hans Raun Iversen. Rites of Ordination and Commitment in the Churches of the Nordic Countries: Theology and Terminology. Museum Tusculanum Press. 2006. 978-87-635-0265-8. https://books.google.com/books?id=Adc8SEdFyhgC&pg=PA218. Copenhagen. 218. The Development of Diaconal Ordinations in Sweden in the Light of Social History. Helena Inghammar.
  2. Pirjo Markkola. Promoting Faith and Welfare. The Deaconess Movement in Finland and Sweden, 1850–1930 . Scandinavian Journal of History. 2000. 25. 1–2. 110. 10.1080/03468750050115618. 143212096 .
  3. Web site: Ebba Boström. Kulturella spår. sv. 11 November 2022.
  4. Encyclopedia: Tuulikki Koivunen Bylund. Ebba Augusta Boström. 8 March 2018. sv. Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon.
  5. Encyclopedia: Otto Centerwall. Ebba A Boström. Dictionary of Swedish National Biography. sv.