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  #21  
Old 05-10-2005, 08:29 AM
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Sally Tompkins

Sally Tompkins administered one of the larger hospitals for the treatment of Confederate casualties. The daughter of Christopher Tompkins, a wealthy businessman and politician, she established a reputation as a philanthropist and nurse in Richmond, Va., where she and her family were living when the war began.

Following the First Battle of Manassas, a prominent Richmond judge named John Robertson offered his home as a military hospital and put Tompkins in charge of the operation. Although other private hospitals in Richmond that served the wounded were shut down to make way for larger military facilities, Tompkins obtained permission to carry on.

Confederate President Jefferson Davis gave Tompkins the rank of captain in the cavalry in September 1861, making her the first woman in the country to hold a military rank during wartime. In lieu of military wages, she received food, medicine and other supplies for the men. She ran her hospital with military discipline, Christian fervor and a fanatic insistence on sanitation. Of 1,333 patients admitted, only 73 died. Because of this success, some of the most grievously injured Army of Northern Virginia troops were sent to her hospital.

After the war, Tompkins remained single. She continued to take an interest in the welfare of Southern veterans until her death in 1916 at age 83, when she was buried with full military honors.



Civil War Magazine by: Alice P. Stein
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  #22  
Old 05-10-2005, 03:44 PM
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What a Wonderfullidea Dawna .. I'lll see If Ican find some that are not already listed.. Two more groups that we shou;d takre the time to honor are the Nuns )Sisters of mercy, Ssters of Charirty etc) Who did their shair of nursing as well ..

And then their are the countless number of Civilian Woman Who offered their kind word, a hand to hold or just a motherly face to look upon as a dying soldier passed on into the after life..

My heart felt thanks go to them all .. as well well as those that serve in that capacity today.

May God bless Them all.

regards Steven
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  #23  
Old 05-10-2005, 04:21 PM
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Theses sisters served in and around Vicksburg Mississippi & Shelby Springs Alabama

Sister Ignatius Sumner (1825-1896)
Sister Mary Vincent Browne (1836 - 1883)
Sister Marvy DeSales Browne (1826 - 1910)
Sister Mary Agnes Maddigan
Sister Mary Philomena Farmer (1842-1876)
Sister Stephana Warde (1829 -1904_
Siister Teresa Newman) (1823-1895
Siister Mary Xavier Poursine (1842-1918)

Sister Mary Regina - served in the washington infirmary


Ye Silent Dead
By Sister Mary Ignatius Sumner

The Silent Dead!
The Silent Dead!
I've Lingered Where They Sleep In Peace.
Where Care And Want Or Thought Of Dread
There Anguised Vigls Cease.

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  #24  
Old 05-12-2005, 12:00 AM
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A list of some of the Civilians that helped ease the suffering of the wounded after the Battle of Franklin.


Sarah J. Adkieson (1844 - ?)

Miss Rose (Roslie) Carter

Mrs Louisa Ann Figuers Bailey Crump (1819 - 1897)

Lulie Crump (1858 - 1889)

Mattie Crump (1845 - ?)

Evalyn M. Currin

Anna DeGraffinreid (1836 - ? )

Mrs Bethenia Hardin Perkins Figuers (1812 - 1869)
Prior to Hood 1864 Tennesee Campaign, Confederate Cav. Gen Wheeler and Forrest had dined at the Bethenia home on west main st in Franklin. On november 30th as the battle of Franklin progressed, Federal troops took some of their wound prisoners to the Betheni'a home. After the battle, she took charge of the wounded soldiers in home and soon they called her "Little Mother" She also helped care for the wounded soldiers in the Episcopal Church near her home.

Harding Perkins Figures (1849 - 1917)
After the Battle of Franklin he helped his mother care for the wounded solders in the Figuers Home.

Ida Figuers (1844-1933)
After the Battle of Franklin he she helped her mother care for the wounded solders in the Figuers Home.

Thomas Norfleet Figuers (1846 - 1935)
Thomas at age 15 enlisted in co. D 32 Tennessee Infantry . After it was determined that he was underage, he was discharged and returnedto Franklin. After the Battle of Franklin he Helped his mother care for the wounded solders in the Figuers Home.

Miss Lenora Hamilton

Annie Marshall (1851 - ? )
Francis C. Marshall (1847 - )

Estelle Mosely (1849 - ? )
Lycurgus S. H. Mosely (1852 - ?)
Mrs Mary Adaline Starnes Mosely (1819 - ? )
Nancy L Mosely (1856 - ? )
Nannie Mosely

Prior Perkins
Miss Sallie Perkins
Miss Anna simpson
Miss B Word (1846 - ? )
Josphina Word (1844- ? )
Mrs Margaret Word (1824 - ? )

Mrs. Carrie Snyder
Alice McPhail Nichol (age 8)
Anna Toone Sloan
Mrs Sarah Carter
Frances a McEwen

Fannie Courtney (age 19)
After the Battle of Franklin Fannie and her Mother took charge of 120 wounded men who occupied the prebyterian church. It being the Largest Federal hospital.. And another home near there own house.

Fannie 12 year old brother went along and wqould raise the head weary heads of the soldiers to give them coffe or water and feed thosewho were not able to do so themself.

He also went upon the battlefiels and helped bury the dead

Caroline "Carrie" Elizabeth Winder McGavock
Shortley after the start of of the battle of Franklin . the Wounded started to go to the rear. On that cold winter night, scores of wounded Confederates were crowed in to Carnton (McGavock Home) Ehen the house could hold no more the wounded were put in outbuildings and under the shelter of near by trees. Make shift operating tables were soon in use in side and outside of the home . all the roomes of the house but one (children's rooms) were ocupied by wounded soldiers.

And as bandages ran short Carrie tore up up sheets, curtains, and her own garments.

As some of the Wounded Died the McGavocked had the buried near there family Cemetery. and In 1866 Land for the rest of the Confederate Dead from the Battle was donated by the McGavocks re..

Today Carnton has the largest privately owned Confederate Cemetery.

Containing almost `1500 Confederate Soldiers and one non Confederate. Marcellus Cuppet (25) who died while helping in the reburials. Marcellus was a former McGavock slave.
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  #25  
Old 05-12-2005, 06:58 AM
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Steven:

Thank you for mentioning the nuns and civilian women of the Civil War - these courageous women were also 'angels' of the battlefield and should be remembered as well.

Dawna

Last edited by dawna; 05-12-2005 at 08:09 AM.
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  #26  
Old 05-12-2005, 07:08 AM
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Alvira Beech Robinson came from Pierrepont where she was born in 1835. She married David Robinson and had three children: George (1856), Charles (1860), and Sarah (1861). Two of Alvira’s brothers, Alva and Enos, enlisted early in 1861; her husband David enlisted in the 60th NY Infantry in October 1861. David was killed at Antietam in September 1862 and she returned to work as school teacher with three small children to raise.

In May 1863 Alva was shot in the leg and asked his sister to come to nurse him. She left her children with her mother and spent 2 months nursing Alva and also worked in the government printing office to defray her expenses in Washington. She returned to West Pierrepont in August 1863. Alva came home that fall to finish his recovery and Enos left the army suffering from “the lung fever.” Alvira undoubtedly cared for both of them, her own three children, and her mother. She continued to support herself and her family, setting up the Pierrepont post office and serving as its first postmaster in July 1876. She operated it out of her own home for 15 years until it was moved a few miles away.

"Anywhere I see suffering, that is where I want to be, doing what I can."
~Princess Diana~

Women of Courage: St. Lawrence County, N.Y. Branch of the American Association of University Women
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  #27  
Old 05-13-2005, 08:05 PM
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Mary Edwards Walker, one of the nation's 1.8 million women veterans, was the only one to earn the Congressional Medal of Honor, for her service during the Civil War. She, along with thousands of other women, were honored in the newly-dedicated Women in Military Service for America Memorial in October 1997.

Controversy surrounded Mary Edwards Walker throughout her life. She was born on November 26, 1832 in the Town of Oswego, New York, into an abolitionist family. Her birthplace on the Bunker Hill Road is marked with a historical marker. Her father, a country doctor, was a free thinking participant in many of the reform movements that thrived in upstate New York in the mid 1800s. He believed strongly in education and equality for his five daughters Mary, Aurora, Luna, Vesta, and Cynthia (there was one son, Alvah). He also believed they were hampered by the tight-fitting women's clothing of the day.

His daughter, Mary, became an early enthusiast for Women's Rights, and passionately espoused the issue of dress reform. The most famous proponent of dress reform was Amelia Bloomer, a native of Homer, New York, whose defended a colleague's right to wear "Turkish pantaloons" in her Ladies' Temperance Newspaper, the Lily. "Bloomers," as they became known, did achieve some popular acceptance towards the end of the 19th century as women took up the new sport of bicycling. Mary Edwards Walker discarded the unusual restrictive women's clothing of the day. Later in her life she donned full men's evening dress to lecture on Women's Rights.

In June 1855 Mary, the only woman in her class, joined the tiny number of women doctors in the nation when she graduated from the eclectic Syracuse Medical College, the nation's first medical school and one which accepted women and men on an equal basis. She gratuated at age 21 after three 13-week semesters of medical training which she paid $55 each for.

In 1856 she married another physician, Albert Miller, wearing trousers and a man's coat and kept her own name. Together they set up a medical practice in Rome, NY, but the public was not ready to accept a woman physician, and their practice floundered. They were divorced 13 years later.

When war broke out, she came to Washington and tried to join the Union Army. Denied a commission as a medical officer, she volunteered anyway, serving as an acting assistant surgeon -- the first female surgeon in the US Army. As an unpaid volunteer, she worked in the US Patent Office Hospital in Washington. Later, she worked as a field surgeon near the Union front lines for almost two years (including Fredericksburg and in Chattanooga after the Battle of Chickamauga).

In September 1863, Walker was finally appointed assistant surgeon in the Army of the Cumberland for which she made herself a slightly modified officer's uniform to wear, in response to the demands of traveling with the soldiers and working in field hospitals. She was then appointed assistant surgeon of the 52nd Ohio Infantry. During this assignment it is generally accepted that she also served as a spy. She continually crossed Confederate lines to treat civilians. She was taken prisoner in 1864 by Confederate troops and imprisoned in Richmond for four months until she was exchanged, with two dozen other Union doctors, for 17 Confederate surgeons.

She was released back to the 52nd Ohio as a contract surgeon, but spent the rest of the war practicing at a Louisville female prison and an orphan's asylum in Tennessee. She was paid $766.16 for her wartime service. Afterward, she got a monthly pension of $8.50, later raised to $20, but still less than some widows' pensions.

On November 11, 1865, President Johnson signed a bill to present Dr. Mary Edwards Walker with the Congressional Medal of Honor for Meritorious Service, in order to recognize her contributions to the war effort without awarding her an army commission. She was the only woman ever to receive the Medal of Honor, her country's highest military award.

In 1917 her Congressional Medal, along with the medals of 910 others was taken away when Congress revised the Medal of Honor standards to include only “actual combat with an enemy” She refused to give back her Medal of Honor, wearing it every day until her death in 1919. A relative told the New York Times: "Dr. Mary lost the medal simply because she was a hundred years ahead of her time and no one could stomach it." An Army board reinstated Walker's medal posthumously in 1977, citing her "distinguished gallantry, self-sacrifice, patriotism, dedication and unflinching loyalty to her country, despite the apparent discrimination because of her sex." After the war, Mary Edwards Walker became a writer and lecturer, touring here and abroad on women's rights, dress reform, health and temperance issues. Tobacco, she said, resulted in paralysis and insanity. Women's clothing, she said, was immodest and inconvenient. She was elected president of the National Dress Reform Association in 1866. Walker prided herself by being arrested numerous times for wearing full male dress, including wing collar, bow tie, and top hat. She was also something of an inventor, coming up with the idea of using a return postcard for registered mail. She wrote extensively, including a combination biography and commentary called Hit and a second book, Unmasked, or the Science of Immortality. She died in the Town of Oswego on February 21, 1919 and is buried in the Rural Cemetery on the Cemetery Road.

"Learning is not attained by chance. It must be sought for with ardor and attended to with diligence." ~Abigail Adams~
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  #28  
Old 05-14-2005, 01:27 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dawna
Steven:

Thank you for mentioning the nuns and civilian women of the Civil War - these courageous women were also 'angels' of the battlefield and should be remembered as well.

Dawna
Your most Welcome.

Sreven
__________________
Steven Noel Cone
Living Historian and Battlefield Preservationest
"Silver Spring Mess" ; "Citizens of the Bonnie Blue" ; "46th Tn Inf. Co. K"
SCV Camp 723 General Robert H. Hatton
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  #29  
Old 05-16-2005, 09:13 AM
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Ellon McCormick Looby was born in Ireland in 1834, immigrated to the United States as a teenager, and married another Irishman, Rody Looby, in Waddington, NY 1854. They had three sons, John (1860), William (1866) , and Richard (1870). In December 1863 Rody enlisted in the 14th NY Heavy Artillery at Potsdam and served for several months before he was wounded in the Battle of Petersburg in July 1864. When Ellon received word of her husband’s injury, she “left Norwood with my only child 4 year old in my arms and started for city point.” City Point Hospital was located near Richmond, VA. Rody was transferred to the Central Park Hospital in VA and Ellon served there as a nurse from August 1864 through the end of the war in 1865.

"I can stand out the war with any man." ~Florence Nightingale~

"St. Lawrence County Historical Association"
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  #30  
Old 05-18-2005, 10:00 AM
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Two other women who served as nurses during the Civil war were Miss Mary A. B. Young and Mrs. Thomas Rhodes. Miss Young, the sister of Captain James Young of the 60th NY Volunteers, reportedly died of the fever “at her post in Annapolis, MD” along with fellow nurse Miss R. M. Billings in January 1865. She is buried in the Greenwood Cemetery in Morristown. Mrs. Rhodes, who died on 1893 in Fullerville, Town of Fowler was described as “a nurse in the late war” in a newspaper clipping of her death notice.

"Lord into thy hands I commend my spirit." ~Lady Jane Grey~

St. Lawerence County Historical Association
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