Cecily Jane Georgina Fane Pope, RRC (January 1, 1862 – June 6, 1938) was a Canadian nurse who served with distinction in the Second Boer War and the First World War.
After the training, Pope became the superintendent of the Columbia Hospital for Women, at Washington D.C., where she opened a school for nurses.[2]
In October 1899, after completing nursing studies at Bellevue Hospital in New York City, Pope volunteered for nursing service in the Second Boer War. Placed in command of the first group of nurses to go overseas, she served for more than a year in South Africa. For the first five months she and four other volunteer nurses served at British hospitals north of Cape Town. After, Pope and another sister proceeded north to Kroonstad where, despite shortages in food and medical supplies, they took charge of a military hospital and successfully cared for 230 sufferers of
enteric fever.
On September 21, 1901,[2] Pope, along with two other nurses, Deborah Hurcomb and Sarah Forbes, received medals for their war service from the Duke of York, later King George V, during his tour to the Outposts of the British Empire.[3] She returned there in 1902 with the Canadian Army Nursing Service as senior sister[2] in charge of a second group of 8 Canadian nurses. She served at a hospital in Natal until the end of the war in May that year. On October 31, 1902,[2] she became the first Canadian to be awarded the Royal Red Cross, awarded to her for meritorious and distinguished service in the field.
In 1917, aged 55, Pope, although in poor health went to work near Ypres and served for the remainder of the First World War until 1918.[citation needed]
Later life
Pope served in England and France during the First World War.
In 2012, Canadian artist Laurie McGaw designed a five-dollar coin in honour of four nurses. Pope stands in the foreground of the coin in front of three others. The coin is made of fine silver and is 99.99% pure, and its production was limited to 10,000.