Noosa News
Three nurses to be honoured more than 100 years after their deaths

An unmarked grave at the South Brisbane Cemetery is all that is left to remember a “crazy brave” nurse who died after volunteering during the Spanish Influenza pandemic more than a century ago.
The Royal Brisbane Women’s Hospital (RBWH) is now working to honour Alice Wyeth and two colleagues, Clara Poppel and Hannah Dufton, by building a permanent memorial and restoring their gravestones.
Alice Wyeth, who was born in Toowoomba and trained at the Mother’s Hospital, was one of 200 nurses who tended to the sick in Brisbane when the pandemic arrived on Australia’s shores in 1919.
Ms Wyeth was a senior and respected nurse who had travelled to Brisbane to volunteer her services, according to the director of the Infectious Diseases Unit at the…
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
’Lethal new opioids’ prompt Wide Bay pill testing call
-
General18 hours ago
Internal Revenue Service starts cutting 20,000 workers
-
Noosa News18 hours ago
Man killed, woman seriously injured in collision in Wongabel, Atherton Tablelands, Queensland
-
Noosa News19 hours ago
Helicopter pilots saving lives, providing food and fodder in flooded outback Queensland