HomeHelpSearchVideo SearchAudio SearchMarc DisplaySave to ListReserveMy AccountLibrary Map


No place for a woman : Harriet Dame's Civil War / Mike Pride ; [with a foreword by J. Matthew Gallman].

Author: Pride, Mike, 1946-2023, author

ImprintKent, Ohio : The Kent State University Press, [2022]

Imprint2022

Descriptionxv, 264 pages : illustrations, maps, portraits ; 25 cm

Note:Duty calls -- "Oh, that I were there" -- Maryland -- "My hands were never idle" -- Fourteen miles to Richmond -- The killing summer -- "The great army of the sick" -- Ghastly harvest -- Bound for Dixie -- Cold harbor -- Point of rocks -- Till death did them part.

Bibliography Note:Includes bibliographical references (pages 247-256) and index.

Note:In June of 1861, 46-year-old Harriet Patience Dame joined the Second New Hampshire Volunteer Infantry Regiment as a matron. No Place for a Woman recounts her dedicated service throughout the Civil War. She camped with the regiment on campaign, nursed its wounded after many major battles, and carried out important wartime missions for her state and the Union cause. Late in the 19th century, she battled alongside her friend Dorothea Dix to overcome prejudice against bestowing pensions on women who nursed during the war. Historian Mike Pride traces Harriet Dame's service as a field nurse during the Peninsula campaign, Second Bull Run, Gettysburg, and Cold Harbor. Twice during that service, Dame was briefly captured. In early 1863, she spend months running a busy enterprise in Washington, DC, that connected families at home to soldiers in the field. Later, on behest of New Hampshire's governor, she traveled south by ship to check on the care of her state's soldiers in Union hospitals along the coast. She then served as chief nurse and kitchen supervisor at Point of Rocks Hospital near Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's headquarters in Virginia. Dame entered Richmond shortly after the Union victory and rejoined her regiment for the occupation of Virginia. After the war, she worked as a clerk in Washington well into her 70s and served as president of the retired war nurses' organization. No Place for a Woman draws on newly discovered letters written by Harriet Dame and includes many rare photographs of the soldiers who knew Dame best, of the nurses and doctors she worked with, and of Dame herself. This biography convincingly argues that in length, depth, and breadth of service, it is unlikely that any woman did more for the Union cause than Harriet Dame. --Dust jacket flap.



This item has been checked out 0 time(s)
and currently has 0 hold request(s).

Related Searches
Author:
Pride, Mike, 1946-2023, author
Series Statement
Interpreting the Civil War : texts and contexts
Subject:
Dame, Harriet Patience, 1815-1900.
Subject:
Military nursing -- United States -- History -- 19th century.
Nurses -- United States -- Biography.
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Medical care.
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Women.
Index Term - Genre/Form
Biographies.
Contributor
Gallman, J. Matthew (James Matthew) writer of foreword.
Series Added Entry-Uniform title
Interpreting the Civil War.