Background
MacManus was born in London in 1886, to James and Charlotte McManus, originally from Killeaden, Company Mayo, Ireland. Though not born in Ireland, her father told her that Killeaden would always be her home.
MacManus was born in London in 1886, to James and Charlotte McManus, originally from Killeaden, Company Mayo, Ireland. Though not born in Ireland, her father told her that Killeaden would always be her home.
In 1908 McManus entered Guy"s hospital in London as a trainee nurse After the start of World War I she served as a nurse on the front lines in France. She treated injured soldiers in the trenches for 3 1/2 years as a Nursing Reserve Sister.
McManus later wrote in her biography Fifty Years Of Nursing - Matron of Guy"s, published in 1956, it was the responsibility of nurses to create homeliness in the “midst of the mud and blood, dust and death, in which they spent most of their days”.
After the war ended McManus returned to London to continue working at Guy"s Hospital. In 1927 she was appointed Matron of Guy"s, a position she would hold until her retirement in 1946.
In 1930 she was awarded an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire for her service. She would have been in charge when the hospital had to be evacuated during the London blitz in 1940.
After the end of World World War II McManus was exhausted.
She retired from Guy"s in 1946 and moved back to Mayo to write her memoirs. She appeared as a "castaway" on the British Broadcasting Corporation Radio programme Desert Island Discs on 23 May 1966. MacManus died in the Sacred Heart Hospital in Castlebar, Mayo, in 1978, aged 92.
She was buried in the cemetery of Street Michael’s Parish Church in Ardnaree, Ballina.