<Li> Julie Harris in Hallmark Hall of Fame episode #14.4 "The Holy Terror" (1965) </Li> <Li> Sarah Churchill in Hallmark Hall of Fame episode #1.6 "Florence Nightingale" (1952) </Li> <P> Florence Nightingale's image appeared on the reverse of £ 10 Series D banknotes issued by the Bank of England from 1975 until 1994 . As well as a standing portrait, she was depicted on the notes in a field hospital, holding her lamp . Nightingale's note was in circulation alongside the images of Sir Isaac Newton, William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, Michael Faraday, Sir Christopher Wren, the Duke of Wellington and George Stephenson, and prior to 2002, other than the female monarchs, she was the only woman whose image had ever adorned British paper currency . </P> <P> Nightingale had a principled objection to having photographs taken or her portrait painted . An extremely rare photograph of her, taken at Embley on a visit to her family home in May 1858, was discovered in 2006 and is now at the Florence Nightingale Museum in London . A black - and - white photograph taken in about 1907 by Lizzie Caswall Smith at Nightingale's London home in South Street, Mayfair, was auctioned on 19 November 2008 by Dreweatts auction house in Newbury, Berkshire, England, for £ 5,500 . </P>

Who was the woman best known during the second decade