Return to Menu Symbol of a Profession: One Hundred Years of Nurses' Caps
Decoration

Cap - Victoria Hospital School of Nursing, London, Ontario - 1999.267.34 - CD2001-68-066
(1999.267.34)

Cap - John H. Stratford Hospital School of Nursing, Brantford, Ontario - 1999.267.32 - CD2001-68-062
(1999.267.32)

Cap - L'Hotel-Dieu de Lévis Hospital School of Nursing - 1999.267.5 - CD2001-68-009
(1999.267.5)

Cap - Hamilton and District Regional School of Nursing - 1999.267.37 - CD2001-68-072
(1999.267.37)


Evolution of the Nurse's Cap

Maids' Caps

Some hospitals chose for their uniforms the current fashions worn by domestic servants, including cap and bibbed apron. During the 1870s, the nurse's cap was almost identical to that worn by working women indoors, consisting of a gathered oval caul covering the back of the head and the hair, and a close-fitting headband (1999.267.34). Another model was the mob cap, an oval or circular piece of cloth gathered onto a band (1999.267.32). Very soon, however, these antecedents became highly stylized. Instead of caps designed for function - covering and keeping the hair neat - they began to take on a symbolic form. They were reduced in size, and heavily starched into form, so as to perch precariously on the top or back of the head (1999.267.5).

The mob cap developed crisp angles with a stiff and regular pleated band, a model which would persist throughout the twentieth century (1999.267.37). The maid's cap was made tiny (1999.267.44), and its gathered caul sometimes raised into a tall mound (1999.267.48) or point (1999.267.24) at the top.



Cap - Winnipeg General Hospital School of Nursing - 1999.267.44 - CD2001-60-003
(1999.267.44)

Cap - Medicine Hat General Hospital School of Nursing - 1999.267.48 - CD2001-60-011
(1999.267.48)

Cap - St. Joseph's Hospital School of Nursing, Glace Bay, Nova Scotia - 1999.267.24 - CD2001-68-046
(1999.267.24)

 

 
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