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. This is because she helped and aided many wounded soldiers during the war, she found thousands of missing men, and she established the American Red Cross.
Clara Barton was born in Massachusetts in 1821, being the youngest of six children. Before Barton devoted her time to the Civil War, she was a clerk, a book keeper, and a teacher for several years. Clara Barton became a
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Because she wanted to do more with her life, Barton began her Civil War service when she decided to take supplies to the men of the Sixth Massachusetts Infantry. These men were attacked in Baltimore, Maryland. Barton soon realized that some of these men were some that she had grown up with or even taught. She immediately started calling them, “her boys”. Barton was one of the first volunteers to appear at the Washington Infantry to care for wounded soldiers. In the late 1861, Barton went to go among the soldiers in the field instead of in the hospitals. 1 During the Battle of Antietam, Barton’s supplies and presence was greatly needed. There was overworked surgeons who were not able to perform to the best of their abilities. Barton is said to have prayed for strength to meet the “terrible duties” ahead. During this battle, Clara Barton worked very close to the battlefield. While treated a soldier, a bullet once tore through her sleeve and killed the soldier she was aiding.2 She rarely left the hospital tents, to which, day and night, came a …show more content…
All of Barton’s supplies came from the army quartermaster in Washington, D.C., donations, or her very own money. However, after the war ended she was reimbursed for buying supplies by Congress.1 Barton was never satisfied with just helping the wounded the soldiers. She wanted to do more. This is why she established the Office of Correspondence with Friends of the Missing Men of the United States Army. President Abraham Lincoln encouraged the friends of missing persons to give her their name, regiment, and company so she could locate them. 3 With this Clara Barton and her assistants located over 22,000 missing
Helping Hand Award Clara barton was an american hero in the civil war. She is known for being the best nurse in the civil war,helping soldiers in the battle of antietam ,and for founding the red cross. My award is the healping hand award and i am giving it to Mrs.Clarissa Harlowe Barton. she helped out majorally in the battle of antitem.
“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.
Barton and her supplies in wagons traveled throughout the war with the Union Army helping and healing the wounded soldiers, Union casualties, and Confederate prisoners. She soon became known as "the angel of the battlefield" because of so many peopled she had helped during and after the Civil War. In 1863, Clara moved from Hilton Heads Island to Morris Island to care for the rising amount of ill and wounded. She worked trying to figure out the cause of the disease on the Island and despite her hard work, she too became very ill and was in need to evacuate to Hilton Head Island.
She was born in North Oxford, Massachusetts. Her father was a town official, captain of the militia, and a member of the Massachusetts Legislature. Her mother was an abolitionist, and strongly believed women should have the same rights as men. Clara believed that she would never be quite as successful as her family. She had a love of learning, but was shy and developed a lisp at a young age.
Barton continued traveling around during the Civil War helping the wounded, tending to the sick, and bringing mail and food to the soldiers in the trenches. Later, she became known for her work establishing a national cemetery in Georgia and identifying the graves of nearly 13,000 men. She is also known for fighting successfully for the ratification of the Geneva Treaty by the U.S. as well as her work during the Franco-Prussian war with International Red Cross volunteers. She distributed relief supplies and opened workrooms in France to help the citizens make new clothes (Founder Clara Barton, American Red Cross.)
Authors dedicated books in her honor and many sent her inscribed copies of their work. In the Civil War Clara Barton was a battlefield nurse, earring the nickname Angel
Throughout Barton’s life, she established many organizations, but they all were centered around one goal, helping people. Helping people was Barton’s mission in life. To this day, she is widely known along with her organization, the American Red
After the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861. Barton carried supplies to soldiers and nursed wounded men on the Battlefields. At first the united states government refused to give help or encouragement. But in 1864, She was appointed superintendent of nurses for the Army of the James. When the Red Cross war was ended, Barton formed a bureau to search for missing mens.
Clara Barton began her nursing legacy with her brother. When she was eleven, her brother fell from the roof of the barn (receiving a severe injury). In the face of chaos, she gathered her courage and took charge. Barton managed to stop the bleeding before the doctor came. Even after the doctor left, she
Clara once said “While our soldiers can stand and fight, I can stand, feed and nurse them.” During the war Clara went to the railroad station when the victims arrived, and nursed 40 men. Clara distributed supplies and nursed the wounded soldiers. One time when she was bringing supplies to the battlefield a bullet came so close to her it pierced through the sleeve of her dress, and killed the soldier she was working on. Clara soon became in charge of all the army hospitals.
The Civil War was a defining moment in the history of the United States. It is well known that many men served and died as soldiers, but women also played an important role in winning the war and supporting the men. Northern women as well as Southern women served our country as spies, nurses, and secret soldiers. As spies, some women went undercover to find new information to provide to the sergeants. As nurses, women would help to cure wounded soldiers and take care of them in the infirmaries located at the bases.
No she wasn’t a soldier, she was a civil war nurse. She didn’t get a single penny for all of her hard work, she basically worked for free. Since she wouldn’t get paid, she would bake pies and let a contraband (an escaped slave taken in behind union lines) and she’d let them sell her pies. The second reason is one factor that answers the question because she’s helped, lived, cared for seven people and she took them in without looking back.
Clara Barton once said, “I may be compelled to face danger, but never fear it, and while our soldiers can stand and fight, I can stand and feed and nurse them.” Not only was Clara Barton a volunteer nurse during the Civil War who exceeded her mandatory duties, but she is also the Founder of the American Red Cross. Throughout her life, she accomplished many amazing things. Her achievements were not due to pure luck, they were earned through hard work and dedication to her aspirations. Clara was revolutionary, determined, and trustworthy.
The American Revolutionary war was a huge event for not only America, but the world. There were heroes and there were people who were against certain things. One person who was considered as a hero of this time was female Sybil Ludington. According to National Women's History Museum website, “Sybil Ludington is the female counterpart to the more famous Paul Revere.” According to notes, “Sybil Ludington is considered a hero because of her action of warning Putnam and Dutchess counties to warn the militia that British troops were burning Danbury, Connecticut”.
An educator, nurse, and founder of the American Red Cross, Clarissa Harlow Barton, more famously known as Clara Barton, was born in 1821. Being a woman born into this time period, she faced hardships and struggled to compete with men and it was because of this that she was pushed towards taking care of people who were wounded or ill. She had her first calling at the age of ten where she nursed her brother back to recovery after he experienced a severe fall and it was not until forty years later in the 1860s that she began making major contributions to the nursing profession. The 1860s was the time of the Civil War, specifically beginning in 1861.