Gertrude Abbott | |
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Born |
Mary Jane O'Brien 11 July 1846 Sydney, New South Wales, Australia |
Died | 12 May 1934 Strawberry Hills, New South Wales, Australia |
(aged 87)
Other names | Sister Ignatius of Jesus |
Occupation | Nurse |
Parent(s) |
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Gertrude Abbott (also known as Mother Abbott; 11 July 1846 – 12 May 1934) was the founder of the former St Margaret's Hospital in Sydney, Australia. It was a major maternity hospital in that city for much of the 20th century.
Abbott was born Mary Jane O'Brien in 1846 in Sydney, to Thomas and Rebecca (née Matthews) O'Brien. In 1848, her family moved to Dry Creek, South Australia, where her father was a schoolmaster and later became a farmer.
When she was 22, in February 1868, O'Brien joined the Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart, recently founded by Mother Mary of the Cross (Mary MacKillop, now canonized), and was given the religious name of Sister Ignatius of Jesus. She later reported to Rev Julian Tenison Woods, the co-founder of the congregation, that she had experienced visions, as did another member of community. The other Religious Sister turned out to have been lying, but she was exonerated. Due to the scandal, however, Sister Ignatius took it upon herself to leave the congregation in July 1872, just four months after having made her final profession of religious vows.
O'Brien moved back to Sydney and began to call herself Gertrude Abbott, later nicknamed Mother Abbott. She formed a small community of women in the hopes of starting a new religious congregation. They lived in scattered residences around Sydney and worked together, supporting themselves through dressmaking. Abbott nursed Woods in his final years. After his death in 1889 she inherited his estate.
Reportedly inspired by the care that she had given a pregnant girl brought to her by the police the previous year, she opened the St. Margaret's Maternity Home in Strawberry Hills, New South Wales, in 1894. The home focused on providing safe housing and care for unmarried single pregnant women. She ran the home for forty years. The home was run by her small religious community, but was not under the authority of the Catholic Church, determined to provide nonsectarian care. The home became a hospital in 1904, offering general gynecological services and an out-patient clinic.