As many as 20,000 women worked in Union and Confederate hospitals
during America's bloodiest war. Black and white, and from various
social classes, these women served as nurses, administrators,
matrons, seamstresses, cooks, laundresses, and custodial workers.
Jane E. Schultz provides the first full history of these female
relief workers, showing how the domestic and military arenas merged
in Civil War America, blurring the line between homefront and
battlefront.
Schultz uses government records, private manuscripts, and published
sources by and about women hospital workers, some of whom are
familiar--such as Dorothea Dix, Clara Barton, Louisa May Alcott,
and Sojourner Truth--but most of whom are not well-known. Examining
the lives and legacies of these women, Schultz considers who they
were, how they became involved in wartime hospital work, how they
adjusted to it, and how they challenged it. She demonstrates that
class, race, and gender roles linked female workers with soldiers,
both black and white, but became sites of conflict between the
women and doctors and even among themselves.
Schultz also explores the women's postwar lives--their professional
and domestic choices, their pursuit of pensions, and their
memorials to the war in published narratives. Surprisingly few
parlayed their war experience into postwar medical work, and their
extremely varied postwar experiences, Schultz argues, defy any
simple narrative of pre-professionalism, triumphalism, or
conciliation.