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Adventures in Mashonaland
By Two Hospital Nurses
This 1893 publication narrates the adventures of two nurses who worked to establish the first European hospital in northern Zimbabwe.
Rose Blennerhassett (Author), Lucy Sleeman (Author)
9781108032506, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 22 September 2011
360 pages, 1 map
21.6 x 14 x 2 cm, 0.46 kg
Written by Rosanna ('Rose') Blennerhassett (c.1844–1907), the daughter of baronet Sir Arthur Blennerhassett, this work of 1893 recounts the adventures of two Anglican nurses who worked in Umtali (now Mutare in northern Zimbabwe). In 1890 Blennerhassett sailed to Johannesburg to nurse victims of a typhoid outbreak, meeting Lucy Sleeman on board. At the end of their period of service, the pair opted to go north into Mashonaland rather than returning to England. They undertook a two-week journey of 190 miles on foot in the bush from the Pungwe river to Umtali, where they established the first hospital, in a series of beehive-shaped mud huts. The pair remained there for two years, often working without a doctor. The book recounts every aspect of their daily adventures, from baking cakes and constructing coffins out of whisky cases to bizarre encounters with witch hunters, a man-eating lion, and Cecil Rhodes.
1. Preliminary
2. Leave Kimberley
3. On the Pûngwé
4. The start
5. Sabi Ophir
6. Settling down at Sabi Ophir
7. Leaving Old for New Umtari
8. The hospital
9. A free day
10. A tale of horror
11. A luxury
12. The hospital empty at last
13. Illness
14. We leave Beira.
Subject Areas: African history [HBJH]