标题和责任声明版块
正题名
Potatoes and How to Cook Them - Canada Food Board
总体资料名称
并列标题
其他标题信息
标题 责任声明
标题说明
描述层级
File
参考代码
版本版块
版本声明
版本责任声明
资料细节等级版块
比例说明(地图的)
投影说明(地图的)
坐标说明(地图的)
比例说明(建筑的)
发行方管辖权和名称 (集邮的)
创建日期版块
日期
物理描述版块
物理描述
出版社连续出版物版块
出版社连续出版物的正题名
出版社连续出版物的并列标题
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与出版社连续出版物相关的责任声明
出版社连续出版物编号
对出版社连续出版物的说明
文献著录版块
创建者名称
传纪历史
Edith White Tisdall was born in 1905 in Vancouver, British Columbia where her entrepreneurial father was a gunsmith and retail merchant; by the time she entered the UBC School of Nursing in 1923, he had served two terms as a Member [Conservative] of the Legislature in Victoria, and now was a mayor of and long-serving alderman for Vancouver.
At UBC, Tisdall, nicknamed "Toddy", was active and involved in campus activities, including the Players' Club, before she entered the clinical portion of the Nursing program at Vancouver General Hospital. She graduated from both UBC and VGH in 1929. As one of the early UBC Nursing graduates, she embraced the new field of provincial public health and school nursing, moving to Kelowna after graduation to become school nurse for the district.
Although she stopped nursing with her marriage to Harley Robertfield Hatfield in 1932, she maintained a lifelong interest in public health nursing and kept contact with classmates such as Muriel Upshall. For most of her married life, the couple and their four children lived in Penticton, where her husband ran a major construction company. He also became involved in local politics and had a lifelong interest in mapping the Cascade wilderness area. Edith died in 1984.