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Statue of Sister Dora - geograph.org.uk - 682348
Statue of Sister Dora, Walsall town centre

Dorothy Wyndlow Pattison, better known as Sister Dora (16 January 1832 – 24 December 1878), was a 19th-century Anglican nun and a nurse who worked in Walsall, Staffordshire.

Life

Dorothy Wyndlow Pattison was born in Hauxwell, Yorkshire, the eleventh of the twelve children of Rev Mark James Pattison (1788-1865) and his wife, Jane (née Winn; 1793-1860) Pattison. One of her siblings was scholar Mark Pattison. Her childhood was overshadowed by the illness of her father, who had suffered a mental breakdown and become violent and domineering. In 1856, she became secretly engaged to a man called James Tate, the son of the headmaster of Richmond School. The Tates were one of the few families with whom the Pattisons had social contact. At the same time she also developed feelings for another man, Purchas Stirke. After her mother's death in 1860, she eventually broke off her relationships with both men. She was able to leave home, due to a £90 bequest from her mother. From 1861–64, she ran the village school at Little Woolstone, Buckinghamshire.

In late 1864, she joined the "Christ Church sisterhood" (known as "Good Samaritans") at Coatham, Middlesbrough,. which became the Community of the Holy Rood. In 1866, as novice Sister Dora, she was sent to Walsall Cottage Hospital to work as a relief nurse and would devote the remainder of her life to nursing. She was sent to work at Walsall's hospital in Bridge Street and arrived in Walsall on 8 January 1865. The rest of her life was spent in Walsall. She worked at the Cottage Hospital at The Mount until 1875, when Walsall was hit by smallpox. She worked for six months at an epidemic infirmary set up in Deadman's Lane (now Hospital Street), treating thousands of patients. During the last two years of her life, she worked at the hospital in Bridgeman Street, overlooking the South Staffordshire Railway (later the London and North Western Railway). She developed a special bond of friendship with railway workers who often suffered in industrial accidents. These labourers gave her a pony and a carriage and even raised the sum of £50 from their own wages to enable her to visit housebound patients more easily.

Death and legacy

In 1877, Sister Dora was diagnosed with breast cancer. She died on Christmas Eve 1878, aged 46. At her funeral on 28 December, the town of Walsall turned out to see her off to Queen Street Cemetery, borne by eighteen railwaymen, engine drivers, porters and guards.

Legacy

Sister Dora funeral notice - Andy Mabbett
Two press clippings, noting the funeral and memorial arrangements for Sister Dora
  • The London & North Western Railway's chief mechanical engineer, Francis William Webb, named many of his engines. It was announced in January 1895 that he planned to name a 2-4-0 passenger locomotive, a rebuild of a Precedent Class 'Jumbo', as No. 2158 'Sister Dora'. A working miniature version of this locomotive (to run on seven and a quarter-inch gauge track) ran for a short time in the 1980s on the Walsall Steam Railway in Walsall Arboretum. The Walsall Steam Railway also regularly hauled passenger trains with a miniature LMS Black 5 4-6-0 number 5000 and this carried the name 'Sister Dora', too (though the prototype 5000 never did). It remains in service at the Great Cockcrow Railway, still named. British Rail Class 31 diesel locomotive 31 430 (now in preservation) was named after her. Several models of this locomotive have been produced in both 00 and N scales. Later British Rail Class 37 diesel loco 37 116 (preserved, now reinstated) received the name from the Class 31.
  • The former Walsall General Hospital was renamed Walsall General (Sister Dora) Hospital. It has now been largely demolished in the rearrangement of the town's provision of health services, but Sister Dora's name is still perpetuated in the new hospitals. The provision for outpatients at Walsall Manor Hospital is named Sister Dora Outpatients Department. In Alumwell Close, Walsall, behind the Manor Hospital is a Mental Health Hospital which has been dedicated to Sister Dora. 'Dorothy Pattison Hospital' cares for Mental Health patients and belongs to the Dudley and Walsall Mental Health Partnership Trust.
  • In 1882, a stained glass window at St. Matthew's Church, Walsall, was dedicated to her.
  • In October 1886, a statue of Sister Dora by Francis John Williamson was unveiled in Walsall.
  • A portrait of Sister Dora by George Phoenix has been preserved at Wolverhampton Art Gallery.
  • Midland Metro named an AnsaldoBreda T-69 tram in her honour.
  • The main road through the village of Woolstone, Milton Keynes, where she ran the village school from 1861 to 1864, is called Pattison Lane.
  • Sister Dora Gardens in Caldmore and Dora Street in Pleck are named for her.
  • A building at Walsall Campus, University of Wolverhampton is named in her honour.
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