Clara Barton photo

Mike Serpa

Lt. Colonel
Joined
Jan 24, 2013
This is a photo of Clara Barton I've not seen before now.
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From the Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs at the Library of Congress
 
I'm in the process of reading A Woman of Valor; Clara Barton and the Civil War by Stephen B. Oates.
His research on her family life and relationships with parents help explain her personality. A woman not appreciated by many during her life.


Thanks for the recommendation. Love to read more on her- we have quite a few indefatigable women whose war service was amazing but Clara really is the most astonishing.
 
Amen to all who wrote that her contributions have been undervalued. In the 1850's she taught at a school in Bordentown, NJ, only a few miles from where I live. The school house is still extant. As a retired high school history teacher I always took an interest in her career and her personality. A few years ago when the US treasury was fiddling with putting a woman on a piece of US currency I tried to convince my NJ legislature to advance her cause. I never heard back from my assembly people on that. Space does not permit a recapitulation of her career (besides being an inspiring classroom teacher and the founder of the American Red Cross) but let me tell readers two incidents from her life. During the war she worked as a volunteer nurse. Nothing that much novel about that except that she went onto the battlefield as the fighting still raged, not just as a nurse in hospitals in the rear after the fighting had ended. On one occasion, as she was cradling a wounded soldier offering him water, the soldier was hit a second time and killed in her lap. This sort of thing did not deter her. After the war she almost single handedly ran the US Government's bureau established to track down the whereabouts of the remains of Union soldiers known to have been killed but not interred in US cemeteries and of soldiers believed to be deceased, listed as missing, but whose deaths were not confirmed and whose burial locations were unknown. I don't know why she is not better known or more widely acclaimed. Perhaps, because she was not much interested in woman's issues, or because of a possible relationship during the war with a married officer, but in my estimation her not just talking about issues, but taking actions to remedy wrongs, makes her a person worthy of emulation and commemoration. Whenever I see photos of her, like the one posted here I say to myself, "There is a person I would like to talk to". And a person I would have liked to have listened to.
 
"I was young and strong and loved to walk," says Clara Barton. "I had four great wagons loaded with supplies for sick and wounded soldiers coming in the rear, so I decided I would not get my feet wet, but wait for my wagons and cross in one of them. The soldiers splashed right through in solid ranks, the water being only about a foot deep. Suddenly the captain of a company in the middle of the stream called out to his men 'Company, Fours, Left, March! Halt! Right, Dress! Front! Now, Boys, There stands Clara Barton. I want you to kneel down in the water on your right knees, and let Miss Barton walk across on your left knees.' This order the soldiers instantly obeyed, and I stepped from knee to knee, the soldiers reaching up and holding my hands, and passed dry shod to the other shore." As Miss Barton related this incident the tears streamed down her cheeks, and she said, "This was the most beautiful tribute of love and devotion ever offered me in my life."

"Clara Barton; a Centenary Tribute to the World's Greatest Humanitarian," Charles Sumner Young, Page 74
https://archive.org/details/clarabartoncente00youn
 
I don't remember seeing this pic of Clara Barton before. I have a wonderful book about her called: "CLARA BARTON Professional Angel" by Elizabeth Brown Pryor written in 1987. It is an informative book on Clara and has 18 pics. She fought for years to get the Red Cross established. Also, a very brave woman to tend to the wounded on the battlefields.
 
Amen to all who wrote that her contributions have been undervalued. In the 1850's she taught at a school in Bordentown, NJ, only a few miles from where I live. The school house is still extant. As a retired high school history teacher I always took an interest in her career and her personality. A few years ago when the US treasury was fiddling with putting a woman on a piece of US currency I tried to convince my NJ legislature to advance her cause. I never heard back from my assembly people on that. Space does not permit a recapitulation of her career (besides being an inspiring classroom teacher and the founder of the American Red Cross) but let me tell readers two incidents from her life. During the war she worked as a volunteer nurse. Nothing that much novel about that except that she went onto the battlefield as the fighting still raged, not just as a nurse in hospitals in the rear after the fighting had ended. On one occasion, as she was cradling a wounded soldier offering him water, the soldier was hit a second time and killed in her lap. This sort of thing did not deter her. After the war she almost single handedly ran the US Government's bureau established to track down the whereabouts of the remains of Union soldiers known to have been killed but not interred in US cemeteries and of soldiers believed to be deceased, listed as missing, but whose deaths were not confirmed and whose burial locations were unknown. I don't know why she is not better known or more widely acclaimed. Perhaps, because she was not much interested in woman's issues, or because of a possible relationship during the war with a married officer, but in my estimation her not just talking about issues, but taking actions to remedy wrongs, makes her a person worthy of emulation and commemoration. Whenever I see photos of her, like the one posted here I say to myself, "There is a person I would like to talk to". And a person I would have liked to have listened to.
I Would say that she is not as well appreciated as she should be. ..
because she was a doer not a talker. The vocal squeaky wheel gets the grease. There should be monuments all over this country for this woman. Who was willing to help anyone not just her own region, sex or race.
 
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So true, I believe her contribution to her country and humanity in general has been grossly undervalued .
At least two places in Maryland remember Clara Barton: Antietam National Military Park at Sharpsburg, and The National Museum of Civil War Medicine in Frederick. The sign above and monument below are at the Joseph Poffenburger Farm on the north edge of Antietam battlefield where Clara established her field hospital there amid the wreck of the Union First Corps.

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The National museum of Civil War Medicine devotes this large display of artifacts like her portable folding trunk bed above either belonging or related to her work as a battlefield nurse or later working for the Sanitary Commission. In addition, the museum also owns her office in downtown Washington, D. C. where she worked to solve problems relating to missing Union soldiers.

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The Women Who Went to the Field

by Clara Barton

The women who went to the field, you say,
The women who went to the field; and pray
What did they go for? just to be in the way!-
They'd not know the difference betwixt work and play,
What did they know about war anyway?
What could they do? - of what use could they be?
They would scream at the sight of a gun, don't you see?

Just fancy them round where the bugle notes play,
And the long roll is bidding us on to the fray.
Imagine their skirts 'mong artillery wheels,
And watch for their flutter as they flee 'cross the fields
When the charge is rammed home and the fire belches hot;-
They never will wait for the answering shot.
They would faint at the first drop of blood, in their sight.
What fun for us boys,-(ere we enter the fight).

They might pick some lint, and tear up some sheets,
And make us some jellies, and send on their sweets,
And knit some soft socks for Uncle Sam's shoes,
And write us some letters, and tell us the news.
And thus it was settled by common consent,
That husbands, or brothers, or whoever went,
That the place for the women was in their own homes,
There to patiently wait until victory comes.

But later, it chanced, just how no one knew,
That the lines slipped a bit, and some 'gan to crowd through;
And they went, - where did they go? - Ah; where did they not?
Show us the battle, - the field, - or the spot
Where the groans of the wounded rang out on the air
That her ear caught it not, and her hand was not there,
Who wiped the death sweat from the cold, clammy brow,
And sent home the message; - "'T is well with him now"?
Who watched in the tents, whilst the fever fires burned,
And the pain-tossing limbs in agony turned,
And wet the parched tongue, calmed delirium's strife
Till the dying lips murmured, "My Mother," " My Wife"!

And who were they all? - They were many, my men:
Their record was kept by no tabular pen:
They exist in traditions from father to son.
Who recalls, in dim memory, now here and there one.-
A few names where writ, and by chance live to-day;
But's a perishing record fast fading away.
Of those we recall, there are scarcely a score,
Dix, Dame, Bickerdyke, - Edson, Harvey and Moore,
Fales, Wittenmeyer, Gilson, Safford and Lee,
And poor Cutter dead in the sands of the sea;
And Frances D. Gage, our "Aunt Fanny" of old,
Whose voice rang for freedom when freedom was sold.
And Husband, and Etheridge, and Harlan and Case,
Livermore, Alcott, Hancock and Chase,
And Turner, and Hawley, and Potter and Hall,
Ah! the list grows apace, as they come at the call:

Did these women quail at the sight of a gun?
Will some soldier tell us of one he saw run?
Will he glance at the boats on the great western flood,
At Pittsburgh and Shiloh, did they faint at the blood?
And these were the women who went to the war:
The women of question; what did they go for?
Because in their hearts God had planted the seed
Of pity for woe, and help for its need;
They saw, in high purpose, a duty to do,
And the armor of right broke the barriers through.
Uninvited, unaided, unsanctioned ofttimes,
With pass, or without it, they pressed on the lines;
They pressed, they implored, till they ran the lines through,
And this was the "running" the men saw them do.

'T was a hampered work, its worth largely lost;
'T was hindrance, and pain, and effort, and cost:
But through these came knowledge, - knowledge is power.-
And never again in the deadliest hour
Of war or of peace shall we be so beset
To accomplish the purpose our spirits have met.
And what would they do if war came again?
The scarlet cross floats where all was blank then.
They would bind on their "brassards" and march to the fray,
And the man liveth not who could say to them nay;
They would stand with you now, as they stood with you then,
The nurses, consolers, and saviours of men.

["The Women Who Went to the Field" was written by Clara Barton. She read the poem during a reception on November 18, 1892 at the Willard Hotel in Washington, D. C. for the Potomac Relief Corps, a unit of the National Woman's Relief Corps.]
 
"I was young and strong and loved to walk," says Clara Barton. "I had four great wagons loaded with supplies for sick and wounded soldiers coming in the rear, so I decided I would not get my feet wet, but wait for my wagons and cross in one of them. The soldiers splashed right through in solid ranks, the water being only about a foot deep. Suddenly the captain of a company in the middle of the stream called out to his men 'Company, Fours, Left, March! Halt! Right, Dress! Front! Now, Boys, There stands Clara Barton. I want you to kneel down in the water on your right knees, and let Miss Barton walk across on your left knees.' This order the soldiers instantly obeyed, and I stepped from knee to knee, the soldiers reaching up and holding my hands, and passed dry shod to the other shore." As Miss Barton related this incident the tears streamed down her cheeks, and she said, "This was the most beautiful tribute of love and devotion ever offered me in my life."

"Clara Barton; a Centenary Tribute to the World's Greatest Humanitarian," Charles Sumner Young, Page 74
https://archive.org/details/clarabartoncente00youn
That's just a great story!! Thanks for posting!
 
I've always been a fan of Clara. Fairfax County and others preserved the Fairfax Station train depot years ago. There she served to the wounded after 2nd Manassas and Ox Hill. Three weeks later she would be in Sharpsburg MD. The book Oates wrote about her is REALLY good. Well worth reading.....especially about the aftermath of 2nd Manassas and during/after Antietam.
 
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