The Women and the Crisis: Women of the North in the Civil WarMcDowell, Obolensky, 1959 - 389 páginas Chronicles the changes which came about through the dedicated work of Northern women during the Civil War regarding the responsibility for treatment of the wounded. Their efforts laid the groundwork for modern organized charity work, the Red Cross, and what could be considered military nursing. Biographies are included of notable women who dedicated themselves to caring for the wounded and changing government policy. |
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Página 142
... attack must be made to the westward and there were other urgent rea- sons why the Western theatre should be the ... attack down the Missis- sippi River from the base at Cairo . There were a number of reasons , however , which made the ...
... attack must be made to the westward and there were other urgent rea- sons why the Western theatre should be the ... attack down the Missis- sippi River from the base at Cairo . There were a number of reasons , however , which made the ...
Página 143
... attack , unsupported by an attack from the rear , were greatly affected by the character of the river banks which , in most places were steep and difficult to scale . There were a number of tributary streams which offered an opening ...
... attack , unsupported by an attack from the rear , were greatly affected by the character of the river banks which , in most places were steep and difficult to scale . There were a number of tributary streams which offered an opening ...
Página 160
... attack . The day before the battle Sherman wrote to Grant , " I do not apprehend anything like an attack upon our position . " That night , with 40,000 Confederates deployed in the woods less than two miles from the picket lines at ...
... attack . The day before the battle Sherman wrote to Grant , " I do not apprehend anything like an attack upon our position . " That night , with 40,000 Confederates deployed in the woods less than two miles from the picket lines at ...
Términos y frases comunes
aid societies Alcott ambulance Anna Annie April army arrived attack battle became began boats Boston boys Cairo called camp campaign Carolina carried cavalry City Point Clara Barton Colonel command Confederate Cornelia Cornelia Hancock crowd Dorothea Dix dress enemy face field hospital fighting fire flag Fort Sumter Gettysburg girls Grant guns hands Harper's Ferry horse husband Julia Ward July June Kady Katharine ladies Lee's Lincoln lines lived Louisa Louisa May Alcott March Mary Livermore McClellan military Miss Dix Mother Bickerdyke moved Negroes never night North nurses officers organization Pauline Pauline Cushman Potomac President railroad regiment river rode Sanitary Commission scene seemed sent Sherman ship sick slaves soldiers South South Carolina story supplies surgeons tents thought took troops Union Army Union forces Vicksburg Virginia volunteer wagons ward Washington White House Wittenmyer woman women wounded wrote York young