"Our Florence Nightingale is Tompkins" said Mary Chestnut, a civil war author. Sally Louisa Tompkins was a nurse in the civil war for the Confederacy. She was the only woman officially enlisted in the army. Without Sally Tompkins, the confederacy would have suffered many casualties but thanks to her incredible nursing care, out of the 1,300 soldiers treated in her private hospital only 73 died.
Rose O’Neal Greenhow (confederate spy) Rose O’Neal Greenhow is friendly with the northern politicians like the Secretary of State and the Massachusetts Senator. On July 1861, she sent reports about the Union’s plan to invade.
Mila Leonard was a nurse in the Civil war. She had been a nurse for 8 years! She was young only 27. Her husband Elijah Leonard, was fighting in the war. They had a child her name was Alyssa Leonard.
“There was to be the beginning of the battle, and there I should be needed first” (Harkins). Clara Barton, a feminist and a nurse, worked in the battle field and had a first hand experience of the tragedies of war. Barton first worked in a patent office and did work on missing soldiers. About a year after she began work in the field and gained knowledge and experience. During her time away she found the International Red Cross which sparked Clara to begin the American Red Cross.
There is very little written record of their service though a few of the more famous names left accounts. At the beginning of the war, nurses were merely volunteers who showed up at military hospitals. But after Battle of Bull Run, Clara Barton and Dorethea Dix organized a nursing corps to help care for the wounded soldiers. http://www.historynet.com/civil-war-nurses Most of the women valorized for their contributions to the war effort were white. Yet African American women, for whom the outcome was of the greatest importance, found their own way to the battlefields.
Lucretia Mott was an important activist in the Civil War because she spoke out against slavery and promoted women's rights. At a young age she became aware of the inequality among men and women, as well as the disgust towards slavery. She devoted her life to being heard among all people for human equality. She fought for equality until her death. Lucretia Coffin, later known as Lucretia Mott, was born in Nantucket, Massachusetts, on January 3, 1793.
The Great War was a long and dangerous journey in which there was a lot of death and sadness. Many people contributed in different ways, whether they fought, nursed, volunteered or took over the jobs of those who had gone to fight. Since all the men went to fight in the war, they needed women to start taking over their jobs. Women started working in factories and jutting out of domestic roles. One of the many women who had significantly contributed towards the Great War included a nurse named Laura Adelaide Gamble, who will be further explored throughout this report.
Molly Pitcher was a nickname given to a woman said to have fought in the Revolutionary War. The story of Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley is considered folklore by historians, or they suggested that molly pitcher is probably a composite of a number of real women. The name itself may have originated as a nickname for woman who carries water to men on the battlefield. It has also been suggested that the of story of the cannon also applies to another brave woman named Margaret Corbin. Molly Pitcher was a patriot who carried pitchers of water to soldiers and helped with cannon duty during the American Revolution’s Battle of Monmouth.
Women fought more than two hundred years in order to got the rights that were guaranteed to man in the constitution of the united states. Even if the revolution of the United States against the colonial Great Britain gave them more consideration among the society especially regarding the education of their children with the republican motherhood aspect, women were not equal to men and they were totally dependent of their husband for their entire life. Then, the civil war appeared in April 1861; during this war, which is considered as the bloodiest war of the American history, women were really involved and contributed a lot to help soldiers both of the confederated and of the union side. Some women engaged herself as nurse and gave care to the soldiers. Other tried to collect funds in order to provide food, uniforms and other things the soldiers needed.
Moving into a new environment is not an easy thing to do. One will have to adapt to the many new changes they will face. Not everything is the same as it was back then. In the novel, The things they carried by Tim O’Brien, the character Mary Anne Bell must adjust to life in a new environment.
Harriet Jacobs lived a life that was voluntarily significant to the Civil War. Harriet experienced a very hard life starting in 1813. In this paper, I will be describing Harriet Jacobs’ life and the significance she had in the Civil War. I will be discussing a very strong woman that made a very big impact on this world. Harriet Jacobs was born into slavery on February 11th, 1813.
Olivia Moyer VA & US History Warren November 1 2017 Trained From the Start A Confederate Nurse, The Diary of Ada W. Bacot records almost all of her life from 1860-1873. During this period of her life, she drastically jumped from living the simple life as the daughter of a wealthy plantation owner to serving as a nurse for the Confederate States of America. Ada Bacot's diary entries give readers today an idea of what the ideal woman was expected to act like during the time of the American Civil War.
Mary Ann was just a wife of a soldier working as a nurse during the Civil war. Her life was quite different from the rest and definitely deserves recognition for what she has accomplished in her lifetime. Mary started out as a housewife, like most wives back then, in Gettysburg, PA. During the Civil War, she became a nurse near a campground in Gettysburg, as her husband was fighting for the union. She was doing regular nurse things, healing the injured, and saving the critically wounded.
Florence Nightingale led a team of nurses, which improved the unsanitary conditions at a British military hospital, during the Crimean War. The patriotism of Florence Nightingale influenced both Northern and Southern women in a similar way. For both Northern and Southern women, Lawrence Nightingale represented a woman who was doing more than just sitting on the sidelines of war waiting for the husband to come home.
Did you know that the American flag represents our country? Betsy Ross was the proud woman who made the first American flag. Betsy had a positive roll on the revolution. Keep reading if you want to learn more about the Revolution and Betsy Ross’s adventure before, during, and her impact on it. Betsy was an intelligent young lady who had very great sewing skills.
In the mid-1800s, as America was growing, socially, and economically, there was a higher demand for nurses due to people getting hurt more often. During the Civil War of 1861 many soldiers, from both the Union and the south, were traumatically injured. An Abundance of nurses were needed to compensate the massive number of patients. One African American woman had a passion for people and the drive to make a difference. Mary Eliza Mahoney was born May 7, 1845.