Details for Wilma Carlton

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5027013010

Data

Marker Number 13010
Atlas Number 5027013010
Marker Title Wilma Carlton
Index Entry Carlton, Wilma
Address 2401 S. 31st St.
City Temple
County Bell
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 656054
UTM Northing 3439448
Subject Codes medical topics and health professionals; women, women's history topics
Marker Year 2004
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Scott & White Medical Center, Brindley Circles
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Wilma Carlton was born in Columbus, Texas, on September 25, 1882, the first child of Mississippi natives Senie Needham and Thomas Jefferson Carlton. The family settled in the Pin Oak area of Milam County by 1880 and grew to include three more daughters and a son. Her father, whose original surname may have been Davidson, worked as a farmer, a bailiff in the county sheriff's office and a rail car inspector. He was killed by another railroad employee in 1899. Her mother moved to Cameron and operated a boarding house there. Wilma, 17 at the time of her father's death, left Texas to attend the Union Benevolent Association Training School, an early, acclaimed nursing school in Grand Rapids, Michigan. In 1904, Carlton graduated from her training, which was based on Florence Nightingale's renowned example. That same year, Drs. Arthur Carroll Scott and Raleigh R. White, Jr. established their Temple sanatarium and a supporting nurses training program. In 1905, they hired Wilma Carlton as the program superintendent. She oversaw the teachers,courses and schedules for the nurses in training, and was the liaison between them and the hospital's physicians. She was also known for her compassionate bedside manner and her embodiment of Florence Nightingale's teachings. During her 17-year career in Temple, Carlton served as a statewide leader in nursing, working toward licensing standards. Active in the Red Cross, she was a member of national and state professional groups,such as the Texas Graduate Nurses' Association, which she served for two terms as president. Carlton became ill in September 1922 and died on December 27 of that year at the age of 40. (2005)

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