Ohlson, Agnes K. (1902–1991)
Ohlson, Agnes K. (1902–1991)
American nurse. Born Feb 20, 1902, in New Britain, CT; died 1991 in FL; dau. of Karolina (Nelson) Ohlson and Johannes Ohlson (Swedish immigrants).
Leader in US nursing education and licensure, graduated from Boston's Peter Bent Brigham School of Nursing (1926) and Columbia University Teachers College (1931); served as Waterbury Hospital's director of Nurse Training and as superintendent of the nurse training school in Waterbury, CT (1931–36); was on board of directors of Connecticut Nurses Association; elected to board of directors of Connecticut State Board of Nursing Examiners (1935); served as secretary, then chief examiner of the CT state board for 27 years; lobbied for a legal definition of nursing; played a key role in the creation of University of Connecticut's school of nursing in Storrs (opened 1942), the 1st baccalaureate nursing program at a public university in CT; served as secretary (1950–54) and president (1954–58) of American Nurses Association.