Woman's Work in the Civil War: A Record of Heroism, Patriotism, and Patience

PART III. LADIES WHO ORGANIZED AID SOCIETIES, RECEIVED AND FORWARDED

Chapter 32,843 wordsPublic domain

SUPPLIES TO THE HOSPITALS, DEVOTING THEIR WHOLE TIME TO THE WORK, ETC.

WOMAN'S CENTRAL ASSOCIATION OF RELIEF. _By Mrs. Julia B. Curtis._

Organization and officers of the Association--It becomes a branch of the United States Sanitary Commission--Its Registration Committee and their duties--The Selection and Preparation of Nurses for the Army--The Finance and Executive Committee--The unwillingness of the Government to admit any deficiency--The arrival of the first boxes for the Association--The sacrifices made by the women in the country towns and hamlets--The Committee of Correspondence--Twenty-five thousand letters-- The receiving book, the day-book and the ledger--The alphabet repeated seven hundred and twenty-seven times on the boxes--Mrs. Fellows and Mrs. Colby solicitors of donations--The call for nurses on board the Hospital Transports--Mrs. W. P. Griffin and Mrs. David Lane volunteer, and subsequently other members of the Association--Mrs. D'Oremieulx's departure for Europe--Mr. S. W. Bridgham's faithful labors--Creeping into the Association rooms of a Sunday, to gather up and forward supplies needed for sudden emergencies--The First Council of Representatives from the principal Aid Societies at Washington--Monthly boxes--The _Federal principle_--Antietam and Fredericksburg exhaust the supplies--Miss Louisa Lee Schuyler's able letter of inquiry to the Secretaries of Auxiliaries--The plan of "Associate Managers"--Miss Schuyler's incessant labors in connection with this--The set of boxes devised by Miss Schuyler to aid the work of the Committee on Correspondence--The employment of Lecturers--The Association publish Mr. George T. Strong's pamphlet, "How can we best help our Camps and Hospitals"--The Hospital Directory opened--The lack of supplies of clothing and edibles, resulting from the changed condition of the country--Activity and zeal of the members of the Woman's Central Association--Miss Ellen Collins' incessant labors--Her elaborate tables of supplies and their disbursement--The Association offers to purchase for the Auxiliaries at wholesale prices--Miss Schuyler's admirable Plan of Organization for Country Societies--Alert Clubs founded--Large contributions to the stations at Beaufort and Morris Island--Miss Collins and Mrs. W. P. Griffin in charge of the office through the New York Riots in July, 1863--Mrs. Griffin, is chairman of Special Relief Committee, and makes personal visits to the sick--The Second Council at Washington--Miss Schuyler and Miss Collins delegates--Miss Schuyler's efforts--The whirlwind of Fairs--Aiding the feeble auxiliaries by donating an additional sum in goods equal to what they raised, to be manufactured by them--Five thousand dollars a month thus expended--A Soldiers' Aid Society Council--Help to Military Hospitals near the city, and the Navy, by the Association--Death of its President, Dr. Mott--The news of peace--Miss Collins' Congratulatory Letter--The Association continues its work to July 7--Two hundred and ninety-one thousand four hundred and seventy-five shirts distributed--Purchases made for Auxiliaries, seventy-nine thousand three hundred and ninety dollars and fifty-seven cents--Other expenditures of money for the purposes of the Association, sixty-one thousand three hundred and eighty-six dollars and fifty-seven cents--The zeal of the Associated Managers--The Brooklyn Relief Association--Miss Schuyler's labors as a writer--Her reports--Articles in the Sanitary Bulletin, "The Soldiers' Friend," "Nelly's Hospital," &c. &c.--The patient and continuous labors of the Committees on Correspondence and on Supplies--Territory occupied by the Woman's Central Association--Resolutions at the Final Meeting. 527-539

SOLDIERS' AID SOCIETY OF NORTHERN OHIO.

Its organization--At first a Local Society--No Written Constitution or By-laws--Becomes a branch of the United States Sanitary Commission in October, 1861--Its territory small and not remarkable for wealth--Five hundred and twenty auxiliaries--Its disbursement of one million one hundred and thirty-three thousand dollars in money and supplies--The Northern Ohio Sanitary Fair--The supplies mostly forwarded to the Western Depot of the United States Sanitary Commission at Louisville-- "The Soldiers' Home" built under the direction of the Ladies who managed the affairs of the Society, and supplied and conducted under their Supervision--The Hospital Directory, Employment Agency, War Claim Agency--The entire time of the Officers of the Society for five and a half years voluntarily and freely given to its work from eight in the morning till six or later in the evening--The President, Mrs. B. Rouse, and her labors in organizing Aid Societies and attending to the home work--The labors of the Secretary and Treasurer--Editorial work--The Society's printing press--Setting up and printing Bulletins--The Sanitary Fair originated and carried on by the Aid Society--The Ohio State Soldiers' Home aided by them--Sketch of Mrs. Rouse--Sketch of Miss Mary Clark Brayton, Secretary of the Society--Sketch of Miss Ellen F. Terry, Treasurer of the Society--Miss Brayton's "On a Hospital Train," "Riding on a Rail"--Visit to the Army--The first sight of a hospital train--The wounded soldiers on board--"Trickling a little sympathy on the Wounded"--"The Hospital Train a jolly thing"--The dying soldier--Arrangement of the Hospital Train--The arduous duties of the Surgeon. 540-552

NEW ENGLAND WOMEN'S AUXILIARY ASSOCIATION.

Its organization and territory--One million five hundred and fifteen thousand dollars collected in money and supplies by this Association-- Its Sanitary Fair and its results--The chairman of the Executive Committee Miss Abby W. May--Her retiring and modest disposition--Her rare executive powers--Sketch of Miss May--Her early zeal in the Anti-slavery movement--Her remarkable practical talent, and admirable management of affairs--Her eloquent appeals to the auxiliaries--Her entire self-abnegation--Extract from one of her letters--Extract from her Final Report--The Boston Sewing Circle and its officers--The Ladies' Industrial Aid Association of Boston--Nearly three hundred and forty-seven thousand garments for the soldiers made by the employes of the Association, most of whom were from soldiers' families--Additional wages beyond the contract prices paid to the workwomen, to the amount of over twenty thousand dollars--The lessons learned by the ladies engaged in this work. 553-559

THE NORTHWESTERN SANITARY COMMISSION.

The origin of the Commission--Its early labors--Mrs. Porter's connection with it--Her determination to go to the army--The appointment of Mrs. Hoge and Mrs. Livermore as Managers--The extent and variety of their labors--The two Sanitary Fairs--Estimate of the amount raised by the Commission. 560-561

MRS. A. H. HOGE.

Her birth and early education--Her marriage--Her family--She identifies herself from the beginning with the National cause--Her first visit to the hospitals of Cairo, Mound City and St. Louis--The Mound City Hospital--The wounded boy--Turned over for the first time--"They had to take the Fort"--Rebel cruelties at Donelson--The poor French boy--The mother who had lost seven sons in the Army--"He had turned his face to the wall to die"--Mrs. Hoge at the Woman's Council at Washington in 1862--Labors of Mrs. Hoge and Mrs. Livermore--Correspondence-- Circulars--Addresses--Mrs. Hoge's eloquence and pathos--The ample contributions elicited by her appeals--Visit to the Camp of General Grant at Young's Point, in the winter of 1862-3--Return with a cargo of wounded--Second visit to the vicinity of Vicksburg--Prevalence of scurvy--The onion and potato circulars--Third visit to Vicksburg in June, 1863--Incidents of this visit--The rifle-pits--Singing Hymns under fire--"Did you drop from heaven into these rifle-pits?"--Mrs. Hoge's talk to the men--"Promise me you'll visit my regiment to-morrow"--The flag of the Board of Trade Regiment--"How about the blood?"--"Sing, Rally round the Flag Boys"--The death of R--"Take her picture from under my pillow"--Mrs. Hoge at Washington again--Her views of the value of the Press in benevolent operations--In the Sanitary Fairs at Chicago--Her address at Brooklyn, in March, 1865--Gifts presented her as a testimony to the value of her labors. 562-576

MRS. MARY A. LIVERMORE.

Mrs. Livermore's childhood and education--She becomes a teacher--Her marriage--She is associated with her husband as Editor of _The New Covenant_--Her scholarship and ability as a writer and speaker--The vigor and eloquence of her appeals--"Women and the War"--The beginnings of the Northwestern Sanitary Commission--The appointment of Mrs. Livermore and Mrs. Hoge as its managers--The contributions of Mrs. Livermore to the press, on subjects connected with her work--"The backward movement of General McClellan"--The Hutchinsons prohibited from singing Whittier's Song in the Army of the Potomac--Mrs. Livermore's visit to Washington--Her description of "Camp Misery"--She makes a tour to the Military Posts on the Mississippi--The female nurses--The scurvy in the Camp--The Northwestern Sanitary Fair--Mrs. Livermore's address to the Women of the Northwest--Her tact in selecting the right persons to carry out her plans at the Fair--Her extensive journeyings--Her visit to Washington in the Spring of 1865--Her invitation to the President to be present at the opening of the Fair--Her description of Mr. Lincoln--His death and the funeral solemnities with which his remains were received at Chicago--The final fair--Mrs. Livermore's testimonials of regard and appreciation from friends and, especially from the soldiers. 577-589

GENERAL AID SOCIETY FOR THE ARMY, BUFFALO.

Organization of the Society--Its first President, Mrs. Follett--Its second President, Mrs. Horatio Seymour--Her efficient Aids, Miss Babcock and Miss Bird--The friendly rivalry with the Cleveland Society--Mrs. Seymour's rare ability and system--Her encomiums on the labors of the patriot workers in country homes--The workers in the cities equally faithful and praiseworthy. 590-592

MICHIGAN SOLDIERS' AID SOCIETY.

The Patriotic women of Michigan--Annie Etheridge, Mrs. Russell and others--"The Soldiers' Relief Committee" and "The Soldiers' Aid Society" of Detroit--Their Consolidation--The officers of the New Society--Miss Valeria Campbell the soul of the organization--Her multifarious labors-- The Military Hospitals in Detroit--The "Soldiers' Home" in Detroit-- Michigan in the two Chicago Fairs--Amount of money and supplies raised by the Michigan Branch. 593-595

WOMEN'S PENNSYLVANIA BRANCH OF UNITED STATES SANITARY COMMISSION.

The loyal women of Philadelphia--Their numerous organizations for the relief of the Soldier--The organization of the Women's Pennsylvania Branch--Its officers--Sketch of Mrs. Grier--Her parentage--Her residence in Wilmington, N. C.--Persecution for loyalty--Escape--She enters immediately upon Hospital Work--Her appointment to the Presidency of the Women's Branch--Her remarkable tact and skill--Her extraordinary executive talent--Mrs. Clara J. Moore--Sketch of her labors--Other ladies of the Association--Testimonials to Mrs. Grier's ability and admirable management from officers of the Sanitary Commission and others--The final report of this Branch--The condition of the state and country at its inception--The Associate Managers--The work accomplished--Peace at last--The details of Expenses of the Supply Department--The work of the Relief Committee--Eight hundred and thirty women employed--Widows of Soldiers aided--Total expenditures of Relief Committee. 596-606

THE WISCONSIN SOLDIERS' AID SOCIETY. _By Rev. J. G. Forman._

The Milwaukie Ladies Soldiers' Aid Society--Labors of Mrs. Jackson, Mrs. Delafield and others--Enlargement and re-organization as the Wisconsin Soldiers' Aid Society--Mrs. Henrietta L. Colt, chosen Corresponding Secretary--Her visits to the front, and her subsequent labors among the Aid Societies of the State--Efficiency of the Society--The Wisconsin Soldiers' Home--Its extent and what it accomplished--It forms the Nucleus of one of the National Soldiers' Homes--Sketch of Mrs. Colt-- Death of her husband--Her deep and overwhelming grief--She enters upon the Sanitary Work, to relieve herself from the crushing weight of her great sorrow--Her labors on a Hospital Steamer--Her frequent subsequent visits to the front--Her own account of these visits--"The beardless boys, all heroes"--Sketch of Mrs. Governor Salomon--Her labors in behalf of the German and other soldiers of Wisconsin. 607-614

PITTSBURG BRANCH UNITED STATES SANITARY COMMISSION.

The Pittsburg Sanitary Committee and Pittsburg Subsistence Committee-- Organization of the Branch--Its Corresponding Secretary, Miss Rachael W. McFadden--Her executive ability zeal and patriotism--Her colleagues in her labors--The Pittsburg Sanitary Fair--Its remarkable success--Miss Murdock's labors at Nashville. 615, 616

MRS. ELIZABETH S. MENDENHALL.

Mrs. Mendenhall's childhood and youth passed in Richmond, Va.--Her relatives Members of the Society of Friends--Her early Hospital labors-- President of the Women's Soldiers' Aid Society of Cincinnati--Her appeal to the citizens of Cincinnati to organize a Sanitary Fair--Her efforts to make the Fair a success--The magnificent result--Subsequent labors in the Sanitary Cause--Fair for Soldiers' Families in December, 1864-- Labors for the Freedmen and Refugees--In behalf of fallen women. 617-620

DEPARTMENT OF THE SOUTH.

Dr. M. M. Marsh appointed Medical Inspector of Department of the South-- Early in 1863 he proceeded thither with his wife--Mrs. Marsh finds abundant work in the receipt and distribution of Sanitary Stores, in the visiting of Hospitals--Spirit of the wounded men--The exchange of prisoners--Sufferings of our men in Rebel prisons--Their self-sacrificing spirit--Supplies sent to the prisoners, and letters received from them--The sudden suspension of this benevolent work by order from General Halleck--The sick from Sherman's Army--Dr. Marsh ordered to Newbern, N. C., but detained by sickness--Return to New York--The "Lincoln Home"--Dr. and Mrs. Marsh's labors there--Close of the Lincoln Home. 621-629

ST. LOUIS LADIES' UNION AID SOCIETY.

Organization of the Society--Its officers--Was the principal Auxiliary of Western Sanitary Commission--Visits of its members to the fourteen hospitals in the vicinity of St. Louis--The hospital basket and its contents--The Society's delegates on the battle-fields--Employs the wives and daughters of soldiers in bandage rolling, and subsequently on contracts for hospital and other clothing for soldiers--Its committees cutting, fitting and examining the work--Undertakes the special diet kitchen of the Benton Barracks Hospital--Establishes a branch at Nashville--Special Diet Kitchen there--Its work for the Freedmen and Refugees--Sketches of its leading officers and managers--Mrs. Anna L. Clapp, a native of Washington County, N. Y.--Resides in Brooklyn, N. Y., and subsequently in St. Louis--Elected President of Ladies' Union Aid Society at the beginning of the war, and retains her position till its close--Her arduous labors and great tact and skill--She organizes a Refugee Home and House of Industry--Aids the Freedmen, and assists in the proper regulation of the Soldiers' Home--Miss H. A. Adams, (now Mrs. Morris Collins)--Born and educated in New Hampshire--At the outbreak of the war, a teacher in St. Louis--Devoted herself to the Sanitary work throughout the war--Was secretary of the society till the close of 1864, and a part of the time at Nashville, where she established a special diet kitchen--Death of her brother in the army--Her influence in procuring the admission of female nurses in the Nashville hospitals-- Mrs. C. R. Springer, a native of Maine, one of the directors of the Society, and the superintendent of its employment department, for furnishing work to soldiers' families--Her unremitting and faithful labors--Mrs. Mary E. Palmer--A native of New Jersey--An earnest worker, visiting and aiding soldiers' families and dispensing the charities of the Society among them and the destitute families of refugees--Her labors were greater than her strength--Her death occasioned by a decline, the result of over exertion in her philanthropic work. 630-642

LADIES' AID SOCIETY OF PHILADELPHIA, &C.

Organization of the Society--Its officers--Mrs. Joel Jones, Mrs. John Harris, Mrs. Stephen Caldwell--Mrs. Harris mostly engaged at the front-- The Society organized with a view to the spiritual as well as physical benefit of the soldiers--Its great efficiency with moderate means--The ladies who distributed its supplies at the front--Extract from one of its reports--Its labors among the Refugees--The self-sacrifice of one of its members--Its expenditures. THE PENN RELIEF ASSOCIATION--An organization originating with the Friends, but afterward embracing all denominations--Its officers--Its efficiency--Amount of supplies distributed by it through well-known ladies. THE SOLDIERS' AID SOCIETY--Another of the efficient Pennsylvania Organizations for the relief of the soldiers--Its President, Mrs. Mary A. Brady--Her labors in the Satterlee Hospital--At "Camp Misery"--At the front--After Gettysburg, and at Mine Run--Her health injured by her exposure and excessive labors--She dies of heart-disease in May, 1864. 643-649

WOMEN'S RELIEF ASSOCIATION OF BROOKLYN AND LONG ISLAND.

Brooklyn early in the war--Numerous channels for distribution of the Supplies contributed--Importance of a Single Comprehensive Organization--The Relief Association formed--Mrs. Stranahan chosen President--Sketch of Mrs. Stranahan--Her social position--First directress of the Graham Institute--Her rare tact and efficiency as a presiding officer and in the dispatch of business--The Long Island Sanitary Fair--Her excessive labors there, and the perfect harmony and good feeling which prevailed--Rev. Dr. Spear's statement of her worth-- The resolutions of the Relief Association--Rev. Dr. Bellows' Testimony-- Her death--Rev. Dr. Farley's letter concerning her--Rev. Dr. Budington's tribute to her memory. 650-658

MRS. ELIZABETH M. STREETER.

Loyal Southern Women--Mrs. Streeter's activity in promoting associations of loyal women for the relief of the soldiers--Her New England parentage and education--The Ladies' Union Relief Association of Baltimore--Mrs. Streeter at Antietam--As a Hospital Visitor--The Eutaw Street Hospital-- The Union Refugees in Baltimore--Mrs. Streeter organizes the Ladies' Union Aid Society for the Relief of Soldiers' families--Testimony of the Maryland Committee of the Christian Commission to the value of her labors--Death of her husband--Her return to Massachusetts. 659-664

MRS. CURTIS T. FENN.

The loyal record of the men and women of Berkshire County--Mrs. Fenn's history and position before the war--Her skill and tenderness in the care of the sick--Her readiness to enter upon the work of relief--She becomes the embodiment of a Relief Association--Liberal contributions made and much work performed by others but no organization--Mrs. Fenn's incessant and extraordinary labors for the soldiers--Her packing and shipping of the supplies to the hospitals in and about New York and to more distant cities--Refreshments for Soldiers who passed through Pittsfield--Her personal distribution of supplies at the soldiers' Thanksgiving dinner at Bedloe's Island in 1862, and at David's Island in 1864--"The gentleman from Africa and his vote"--Her efforts for the disabled soldiers and their families--The soldiers' monument. 665-675

MRS. JAMES HARLAN.

Women in high stations devoting themselves to the relief of the Soldiers--Instances--Mrs. Harlan's early interest in the soldier--At Shiloh--Cutting red-tape--Wounded soldiers removed northward after the battle--Death of her daughter--Her labors for the religious benefit of the soldier--Her health impaired by her labors. 676-678

NEW ENGLAND SOLDIERS' RELIEF ASSOCIATION.

History of the organization--Its Matron, Mrs. E. A. Russell--The Women's Auxiliary Committee--The Night Watchers' Association--The Hospital Choir--The SOLDIERS' DEPOT in Howard Street, N. Y.--The Ladies' Association connected with it. 679, 680