We begin to tell the stories…
September 4, 2024
MacDougal Park, Rockland
“Mere change is not growth.
Growth is the synthesis of change and continuity,
And where there is no continuity, there is no growth.”
CS Lewis
RDNA thanks the City of Rockland for joining us in establishing this memorial garden. We owe a debt of gratitude to our friends who helped make this garden and these memorials a reality. We appreciate our neighbors who daily thank us for the garden, walk through the garden and enjoy it, and stop to share how fondly they remember their nurse, Eliza Steele ~ recognizing her legacy and importance to this community, and the importance of community nursing and RDNA.
Garden Dedication


Donor – RDNA of today
Eliza Steele grew up in St George. After nursing school, she worked as the Rockland Red Cross public health nurse. In 1929, the Red Cross gave up this public health unit. Eliza rallied civic and community leaders, together forming RDNA ~ a unique partnership that continues to this day.
For 40 years, Miss Steele, as she was fondly known, was for many the face of health care ~ during routine visits to the home, at wellness and vaccination clinics, as the school nurse. Physicians relied heavily on her nursing and diagnostic skills. She assisted with adoptions, packed toys for children at Christmas, and taught classes in child care to Candy Stripers at Knox Hospital. Eliza Steele is remembered as one of Rockland’s most remarkable and dedicated citizens. The community was truly her family, and the well-being of all her purpose.

Donor – Owls Head Garden Club
The RDNA workload was too large for one nurse to manage alone. After World War II, Margaret Torfason was working at Knox Hospital, when she was introduced to Eliza Steele. Eliza paid particular attention to how Margaret cared for her patient, proceeding to recruit her for RDNA. Margaret’s nursing experience had included service as an army nurse in the Pacific theater during the war, but no public health or in-home care. 

Donors – her children, Mark Lewis, Susan Lewis Baines, Tracey Lewis Morrill, Todd Lewis, and Renee Lewis Heal
Nursing today in many ways looks nothing like the nursing of Eliza Steele and Margaret Torfason’s day, yet much does indeed remain the same. For decades, Nancy Lewis held nursing leadership roles in the area – first at Knox Hospital and later PenBay Medical Center. In 2007, she joined the RDNA Board as the Nursing Committee Chair, and working closely with our first Clinical Care Director, Carol Melquist, and with me, together renewed and realigned the agency toward 21st century standards, while carefully preserving the long-standing mission and vision. 

Donors ~ Brian Harden & the Estate of Warren Bodine
The success of RDNA is as much dependent on the governance and leadership volunteers and staff, as on the nurses. In the wake of the Rockland Community Chest collapsing in 1940, civic leaders joined together to incorporate the Rockland District Nursing Association. As was customary, men served on the Board, while female team workers of the association’s women’s division campaigned door to door for donations. 

Donors ~ Dean & Deirdre Felton
Caring for each other reaches beyond nursing visits. Through the decades, RDNA has witnessed and been repeatedly moved by the beauty and challenges of caregiving ~ the weariness and desire for a moment’s peace. Pauline Archer was sophisticated and gracious ~ a prodigious fundraiser for local hospitals in her Ohio community. For decades she taught phys ed, particularly focusing on creatively encouraging her young female students. 

Donors ~ Brian Harden & the Estate of Warren Bodine
Community is the essence of RDNA, and our friends are the backbone. Warren Bodine was a distinguished resident, who settled here after returning from duty in Vietnam. He purchased the local book shop, the Reading Corner, which for over 40 years remained a downtown fixture, a beloved place to find treasures and explore new worlds. Warren served on numerous municipal boards and committees. 


