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. In many sections of the book, locations vary between Virginia, South Carolina, and North Carolina. The reason her diary was published, or the thesis, was to show that while women did play a role in the American Civil War, the duties of women were greatly limited due to societal expectations and gender bias. …show more content…
For example, when one of her father's business companions comes to the house, she retires to her room. When a disagreement occurs between her and her sister-in-law, she merely treads back off to her room to cry because her father and brother took her sister-in-law's side over her own. Ada doesn't even dream of becoming a nurse and traveling to Virginia unless the men approve of her doing it. At the start of Ada serving as a nurse, she was only an errand boy of sorts. She cooked for the soldiers, performed duties of a housekeeper, made sure soldiers were comfortable, and did favors for important men. "When I had finished washing his face and combing his hair, he thanked me so politely that I felt I had really conferred a favour (70)." Ada was not performing nursing duties, and yes, while she traveled to Virginia to help soldiers, she was doing personal favors instead of administering medications or dressing wounds. Ada followed every command her superiors ordered of her, no matter how unusual the
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.
Showing how giving away women to a European help their alliance with them. This leads to her side of the family tree staying in Africa well after the Atlantic slave trade is
When one thinks of the Civil War, they normally think of the generals or the soldiers actually fighting in the battles. But what about the people behind the scenes? Who cared for these soldiers and brave men before, during, and after battles? Clara Barton is one of the most honored women in American history exactly for this. She is known as the Angel of the Battlefield.
The book eventually put Tom in Louisiana, where he was eventually violently beat. As northerners began to read her novel, they began to realize that slavery was a lot worse they thought it was. After reading her story, the abolition movement began to take flight
Gerald Schwartz, A Woman Doctor's Civil War: Esther Hill Hawks' Diary. (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1984. ix, 30lp. Illustrations, maps, bibliography, index. Born in Brooklyn, New York, Gerald Schwartz is a professor of history at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, North Carolina.
The main character Jane in the film “The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman” and Linda in the reading “Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, by Harriet Jacobs”, have both gone through many similar challenges in their lives during slavery. These challenges allowed both characters to maintain a strong exterior along with itching them many life lessons to pass along. The main character Jane in the film “The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman” wanted to go to the free states (the North) in order to receive the life she wanted. In order to do this Jane needed to go through many challenges before she was able to reach her
The Fight for Women’s Independence When thinking about the Revolutionary War, we think about the American colonist fighting against British rule for America’s freedom. In Carol Berkin’s book, Revolutionary Mothers: Women in the struggle for America’s Indepe6ndence, we are shown through women’s eyes how the war affects them, and not just the army’s that fought in the war. The war saw changes in women that were different than their style of life had been, although not always recognized by the men who fought the war. Berkin argues that women were still treated the same as before the war, no matter the struggle for independence for their nation and themselves. I agree with Carol Berkin, because women did what they could at home or in the front
The work of this memoir is a record of experiences Jacobs faced in real life. That form of autobiography is indistinct with the truth because she is recollecting memories, which is refined through some creativity. There are multiple pieces of dialogue in the narrative that Jacobs could not have been secretive about; it is also not likely that her reminiscence was good enough to bring mind to the countless details included. A memoir 's virtue is often that it claims to speak for the defenseless and bears witness to a man 's lack of compassion. Harriet speaks on behalf of her sisters in slavery, and calls upon the women from the north to notice and take action against the distinguishing system known as slavery.
The Civil War opened up the field of nursing to women, breaking down yet another barrier of the strict gender roles placed on women during the nineteenth century. Women from both the North and the South joined the Civil War as both nurses and “matrons”. The comparison of the way Faust presents Northern and Southern women in the book Mothers of Inventions, lends insight on the similarities and differences between Union and Confederate nurses. According to Faust, Florence Nightingale influenced both Northern and Southern women decision to join nursing during the Civil War (pg 92).
On day on January 1,1863, Susie King Taylor was with many people who heared a performance of President Lincoln enslaving all people in U.S.A. As womans who clean cloths, “the First South Carolina Volunteers, Union Army troops that” created parties, “she won a great deal in common with “her” soldiers”. Susie’s life, 14 years old Susie was a new freed slave having fun once in a lifetime moment. “She spent her days washing cloths, comforting the wounded and the sick, and teaching both adults and children to read and write, all without getting paid. which, she recognized as being good or important, it would be good if she got paid”, ( black past ) “Susie baker king taylor was born on the Grest Farm in Liberty County, Georgia, on August 6, 1848, she was raised as an enslaved person.”
"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.
Having thoroughly analyzed the ways in which the Civil War profoundly altered concepts of womanhood and domesticity, the same method must be undertaken in examining these changing concepts within the South as well. Within his article entitled “Altars of Sacrifice: Confederate Women and the Narratives of War,” Drew Gilpin Faust emphasizes the importance of the Civil War as it stood out among other wars for “the place of women in that conflict stimulated especially significant examination and discussion of women’s appropriate relationship to war – and thus to society in general.” Moreover, he further stresses that while both the North and South were greatly dependent on the female population, the South seems to have relied on female participation
Florence Nightingale, strong, powerful, intelligent, and ambitious, who would’ve expected this out of a women in the 1800’s to late 1900’s. Tending to those in war zones, living in harm 's way while working in a dirty, rat infested, and disease hoarding hospital, disobeying her parents wishes. Florence was unbelievably brave and ambitious to keep fighting for what she wanted. She worked all day and night while waiting, hoping, and praying that everyone around her would be okay her ambitious side was revealed to society and her family. She was very powerful impacting the ways those look at a lady and how they should do their jobs.
The Nightingale Pledge is in itself a moral oath for nurses. It is by some standards considered outdated or perhaps old fashioned, but undeniably there are points that still ring true today in modern nursing. The specific point I would like to touch on is the last line of the pledge. " With loyalty will I endeavor to aid the physician in his work, and devote myself to the welfare of those committed to my care. " In my opinion, I believe this quote is saying that for a nurse, it is his/her obligation to follow the physicians orders to a fair degree and to dedicate his/her efforts to his/her
Florence Nightingale Theory of Nursing Upon initial assessment of Mrs. Adams case, many things are out of line according to the theory of nursing by Florence Nightingale. To begin an assessment would be to use your sense of observation as the way to collect and verify data