Dame Sarah Ann Swift, GBE, RRC (22 November 1854, Kirton Skeldyke, Lincolnshire – 27 June 1937, Marylebone) was an English nurse and founder in 1916 of the College of Nursing Ltd. which became the Royal College of Nursing.[1] The College of Nursing created the first registers of nurses, a blueprint for the introduction of Nurse registration in the United Kingdom.[2]
Swift was born on the Blossom Hall Estate at Kirton Skeldyke in Holland, Lincolnshire, the daughter of Robert Swift, a tenant farmer.[3] She undertook training in nursing at the Royal Infirmary, Dundee (1877-1890).
Swift held a number of senior nursing and matron positions in Dundee (Home for the Incurables 1886). City Hospital Liverpool (1887), London Fever Hospital (1888), Seamen's Hospital Constantinople (1890) then Guy's Hospital, London. She was Matron of Guy's Hospital (1901–09), then retired, but at the outbreak of the First World War she was appointed matron-Chief for the British Red Cross Society and the Order of St John of Jerusalem in England.
With the Hon. Arthur Stanley (MP, Chairman of the Joint War Committee of the British Red Cross in World War One) Swift founded the College of Nursing Ltd . The other four founding members were Miss Alicia Lloyd-Still (matron of St. Thomas' Hospita
By 1918 there were 13,000 Members. They elected the first council and set up Centres (later to be called Branches). The College of Nursing Ltd later became the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) modeled on the Royal College of Physicians and surgeons. On 27 March 1916 the College of Nursing was registered as a limited company. Dame Sarah Swift was the first member of the College of Nursing, member of Council 1916-37, President 1925-27,Vice president 1928-9 and Hon.Treasurer 1927-37[4]
The College of Nursing became the Royal College of Nursing in 1947.
In 1916 Swift was made Lady of Grace of the Order of St John of Jerusalem.[5]
In 1919 she was made Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE) for her services to nursing.[6]
In 1929 she was awarded the Florence Nightingale medal of the International Committee of the Red Cross.[7]
A ward at St Thomas Hospital is named after her.