On August 13, 1881, Spelman College in Atlanta, Ga. opened the first African American nursing school.

African Americans seeking hospital care, especially in the South, were not admitted into white hospitals, and only a limited number of nursing programs were accepting African American students. This created a need for nursing schools and Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary, later Spelman College, established the first nursing school.

Nearly a decade earlier, in 1872, the New England Hospital for Women and Children opened the first school for nurses with a one-year curriculum. By 1873, three schools of nursing inspired by Florence Nightingale opened in New York City, New Haven, Connecticut and Boston, Massachusetts. The first African American nursing school would soon follow.

Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary began with Sophia B. Packard and Harriet E. Giles, schoolteachers and Baptist missionaries from New England. The school opened on April 11, 1881, just four months before creating the first African American nursing school. The pair started a school in the basement of Friendship Baptist Church and embarked on a mission to provide quality education to black women and girls.

In 1884, the school was renamed Spelman Seminary in honor of Mrs. Laura Spelman Rockefeller and her parents, who were activists in the antislavery movement, and it was later changed again to Spelman College in 1924. The college grew beyond the basement and into a college with more than 2,100 students from 43 states and 10 foreign countries.

In September 2014, Emory School of Nursing announced a partnership with Spelman College. Emory University’s Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, one of Georgia’s top-ranked nursing schools, joined forces with Spelman College to offer a dual degree program that provides Spelman students with the opportunity to obtain a degree in nursing. The partnership requires students to begin their studies at Spelman.

After the completion of a three-year program, students are then able to enroll at Emory for a two-year track that will let students earn a Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor of Science in Nursing. The goal is for students to attain a full liberal arts experience while completing pre-requisites for Emory University.

Shayla Farrow is a multimedia journalist with a Media, Journalism and Film Communications degree from Howard University and a master’s degree in management from Wake Forest University. Shayla discovered her passion for journalism while working as a reporter with Spotlight Network at Howard University. She worked with other campus media, including NewsVision, WHBC 96.3 HD3, WHUR-FM, 101 Magazine, and the HU News Service. Her reporting abilities earned her opportunities to interview industry professionals including Cathy Hughes, movie director Malcolm D. Lee and creator of “David Makes Man,” Tarell Alvin McCraney. Shayla intends to leave her mark in journalism by broadcasting radio and television shows that cover a wide array of topics ranging from politics and social justice issues to entertainment and pop culture. She has worked on a variety of shows, including the Wendy Williams Show, The Joe Madison Show, and The Karen Hunter Show as well as worked as a producer for the NBC News Channel. However, her ultimate career goal is to own a television and audio entertainment platform that provides quality content to viewing and listening audiences.

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