An Armful of Babies and a Cup of Tea: Memoirs of a 1950s Health Visitor: Memoirs of a 1950s NHS Health Visitor

An Armful of Babies and a Cup of Tea: Memoirs of a 1950s Health Visitor: Memoirs of a 1950s NHS Health Visitor

by Molly Corbally (Author)

Synopsis

For all fans of Call the Midwife - a touching memoir of a young health visitor in postwar England.

After serving as a nurse in WW2, Molly Corbally joined the brand new NHS and became one of the first official District Health Visitors, attending to mothers and babies from all walks of life in the picturesque village near Coventry she came to call home. Social work was uncharted territory at the time, and Britain was very much worse for wear - TB, polio, measles and whooping cough were just some of the hazards new babies faced. Social conditions could also add to the problems, at a time when poverty and alcoholism were rife.

Armed with only her nursing training, her common sense and a desire to serve, Molly set out to win over a community and provide a new and valuable service in times of great change. As well as the challenges there was also joy and laughter, from the woman who finally had a baby after fifteen years of trying, to the woman who thought she should use marmalade as nappy cream, because the hospital had never taken the label off the jar they were using to store it.

Warm, witty and moving, An Armful of Babies is a vivid portrait of rural England in the post-war years, and a testament to an NHS in its own infancy and to what hasn't changed: the bond between parents and their children, and the importance of protecting that.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Publisher: Two Roads
Published: 26 Jul 2018

ISBN 10: 1473671493
ISBN 13: 9781473671492

Media Reviews
A great discovery ... a wonderfully intimate sense of everyday life in a now-vanished Britain * Reader's Digest *
Enchanting * Sunday Post *
Author Bio
Molly Corbally served as a nurse in World War II, and on returning to England became one of the first District Health Visitors in the newly-formed NHS. She worked in the rural Midlands between 1940s-70s. She died in 2012, but her book was rediscovered in 2016 and republished here.