Pauline Fletcher

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Pauline Bray Fletcher (born 1878 in Georgia; died 1970) was a registered nurse and the founder of Camp Fletcher near Bessemer.

Fletcher attended Lucy Craft Lacey's Haines Institute in Augusta, Georgia; Hampton Institute in Hampton, Virginia; and Alabama A&M College in Madison County.

Fletcher came to Birmingham in 1906 to work at the Children's Home for Negroes Hospital. In 1909 she was employed by United Charities of Birmingham. In 1915 she was hired as a field nurse for the American Cast Iron Pipe Company and in [[1920] she began working for the Jefferson County Anti-Tuberculosis Association under Bertha Clement.

The Anti-Tuberculosis Association operated a Kiddie Camp on Shades Mountain for white children suffering from the tuberculosis, and Fletcher saw the need for a similar facility for African Americans. She organized the Girl's Service League to raise donations to purchase property for a convalescent camp for African American women and children, which she named in honor of Margaret Murray Washington. A year later she mortgage her own home to pay for construction of a 5-room cabin. In recognition of her many sacrifices on behalf of the public, the board of the Girl's Service League voted in 1942 to rename the camp in Fletcher's honor.

Camp Fletcher has since been expanded to more than 300 acres and has been used as a recreational camp by the Youth Service League (successor to the Girl's Service League]], and later by Camp Fire USA.

Through the efforts of businessman A. G. Gaston, a monument to Pauline Fletcher was erected at Kelly Ingram Park in downtown Birmingham in 1979. A documentary film, The Legacy of Pauline Bray Fletcher was produced in 2015.

References