Dame Alicia Frances Jane Lloyd Still, DBE, RRC (4 November 1869 – 23 July 1944) was a British nurse, teacher, hospital matron and leader of her profession.
[4] She became a probationer at the Florence Nightingale School at St. Thomas' Hospital, London, UK on 29 December 1894, under the matron, Miss Gordon.
Lloyd Still was instrumental in the creation of the Association of Hospital Matrons in 1919 and elected the first president, a post she held for 23 years, 1919-1937.
[3] She was the second name, after Ethel Gordon Fenwick, on the newly established register of the General Nursing Council in 1921.
[4] She attended International Council of Nursing meetings as representative of Great Britain in 1927 and 1929, and was elected President in 1933.
A funeral service was held in the chapel at St Thomas's Hospital, and she was buried on 26 July in Brookwood cemetery, Surrey, in an area that she had acquired for Nightingale nurses.
[2] Lloyd Still collected material things used or associated with Florence Nightingale as important artefacts for the history of the nursing profession.
The Florence Nightingale Museum Trust was formed in 1983 and is run as an independent charity with strong links with Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, with the British National Health Service in general, and with nursing organizations across the world.