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Clara C. Frye (1872–1936) was an American nurse in Tampa, Florida who established the Clara Frye Hospital, where she worked for 20 years in the early 1900s. Frye's hospital admitted patients of all ethnicities.

Frye moved to Tampa in 1901 and in 1908 opened a hospital for black patients in her home, [1] making it Tampa's only hospital to admit Black people. [2] Her dining room table was the operating table. [1] Frye was the only permanent employee of the hospital. [2] A building was secured in 1923 and was purchased by the City of Tampa in 1928. [1] At the time, the Tampa Municipal Hospital, now Tampa General Hospital, did not admit African American patients. This changed in the 1950s.

The Clara Frye Memorial Hospital that existed in West Tampa from 1938 to 1967 was named after her. The original Tampa General Hospital building was renamed after Frye in 1991. Frye will also be immortalized along with other prominent Tampa historical figures on the Tampa Riverwalk with a bronze bust. [1]

A memorial garden at Water Works Park (Tampa) honors her legacy.

References

  1. ^ a b c d [Riverwalk honors history] March 7, 2012 Tampa Bay Times
  2. ^ a b Greenbaum 2002, p. 148.

Bibliography

  • Greenbaum, Susan D. (2002). "Sociedad la Unión Martí-Maceo". More Than Black: Afro-Cubans in Tampa. University Press of Florida. pp. 148–177. ISBN  0-8130-2466-8.