A Little Girl Military Record Sex

A Little Girl Military Record Sex




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A Little Girl Military Record Sex
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^ Brown, Thomas J. (1998). Dorothea Dix: New England Reformer . Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674214880 .

^ Schultz, Jane E. (Winter 1992). "The inhospitable hospital: gender and professionalism in Civil War medicine". Signs . 17 (2): 363–392. doi : 10.1086/494734 . JSTOR 3174468 . S2CID 143761860 .

^ Wood, Ann Douglas (1972). "The war within a war: women nurses in the Union Army". Civil War History . 18 (3): 197–212. doi : 10.1353/cwh.1972.0046 .

^ Miller, Edward A. (1997). "Angel of Light: Helen L. Gilson, army nurse". Civil War History . 43 (1): 17–37. doi : 10.1353/cwh.1997.0010 .

^ Jump up to: a b Leonard, Elizabeth D. (1995). "Civil War nurse, Civil War nursing: Rebecca Usher of Maine" . Civil War History . 41 (3): 190–207. doi : 10.1353/cwh.1995.0039 . PMID 27652391 .

^ Hamand Venet, Wendy (2005). A Strong-Minded Woman: The Life of Mary Livermore . University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 9781558495135 .

^ Gardner Holland, Mary, ed. (1895). Our Army Nurses: Stories from Women in the Civil War . ISBN 978-1889020044 .

^ Burton, David Henry (1995). Clara Barton: In the Service of Humanity . Greenwood Press. ISBN 9780313289453 .

^ Hilde, Libra R. (2012). Worth a Dozen Men: Women and Nursing in the Civil War South . University of Virginia Press. ISBN 9780813932187 .

^ Quinn, E. Moore (May 2010). " 'I have been trying very hard to be powerful "nice" …': the correspondence of Sister M. De Sales (Brennan) during the American Civil War". Irish Studies Review . 18 (2): 213–233. doi : 10.1080/09670881003725929 . S2CID 144279525 .

^ Wells, Cheryl A. (Winter 2001). "Battle time: gender, modernity, and Confederate hospitals". Journal of Social History . 35 (2): 409–428. doi : 10.1353/jsh.2001.0149 . JSTOR 3790195 . S2CID 145675218 .

^ Ethel A. Hurn, Wisconsin Women in the War between the States (Wisconsin History Commission, 1911).

^ Culpepper, Marilyn M. (1994). Trials and Triumphs: American Woman in the Civil War . Michigan State University. p. 23.

^ Clinton, Catherine (2000). Southern Families at War . Oxford University Press (US). pp. 16 .

^ Jessica Fordham Kidd, "Privation and Pride: Life in Blockaded Alabama," Alabama Heritage Magazine (2006) 82 pp 8–15.

^ Mary Elizabeth Massey Ersatz in the Confederacy: Shortages and Substitutes on the Southern Homefront (1952) excerpt and text search pp 71–73

^ C. Mildred Thompson, Reconstruction In Georgia: Economic, Social, Political 1865–1872 (1915), pp 14–17, 22

^ Stephanie McCurry, "'Bread or Blood!'" Civil War Times (2011) 50#3 pp 36–41.

^ Teresa Crisp Williams, and David Williams, "'The Women Rising': Cotton, Class, and Confederate Georgia's Rioting Women", Georgia Historical Quarterly, (2002) 86#12 pp. 49–83

^ Michael B. Chesson, "Harlots or Heroines? A New Look at the Richmond Bread Riot." Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 92#2 (1984): 131–175. in JSTOR

^ Jessica Fordham Kidd. "Privation and Pride: Life in Blockaded Alabama". Alabama Heritage (2006) 82. pp. 8-15.

^ Jonathan M. Wiener. "Female Planters and Planters' Wives in Civil War and Reconstruction Alabama, 1850-1870". Alabama Review (1977) 30#2. pp. 135-149.

^ "Female Soldiers in the Civil War" . Civilwar.org. 2013-01-25 . Retrieved 2015-08-09 .

^ Goldstein p.110

^ Jessica Ziparo, “Northern Women, the State, and Wartime Mobilization,” in Women and the American Civil War , ed. Judith Giesberg and Randall Miller (Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 2018), 72-73.

^ Anne J. Bailey, “The Defenders: The Nancy Harts,” in Confederate Women , ed. Muriel Phillips Joslyn (Gretna, LA: Pelican, 1996), 45.

^ Erin Blakemore, “An All-Woman Confederate Militia Guarded Their Georgia Hometown,” History , 25 June 2018, accessed 1 December 2018. [1] .

^ Bailey, “The Defenders,” 46.

^ Bonnie Tsui, She Went To the Field: Women Soldiers of the Civil War (Guildford, CT: TwoDot, 2006), 1.

^ See Fraser Easton, "Gender's Two Bodies: Women Warriors, Female Husbands, and Plebeian Life," Past and Present 180 (August 2003), 131-174.

^ See Sarah E. Edmonds, Nurse and Spy in the Union Army (Hartford, CT: W.S. Williams & Co., 1865).

^ Tsui, She Went to the Field: Women Soldiers of the Civil War , 24

^ Eggleston, Larry. “Women of the Civil War: Extraordinary Stories of Soldiers, Spies, Nurses, Doctors, Crusaders, and Others.” (McFarland, 2015) pgs 12-15

^ DeAnne Blanton and Lauren M. Cook, They Fought Like Demons: Women Soldiers in the American Civil War (Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press, 2002), 145-46.

^ Frank Moore, Women of the War: Their Heroism and Self-Sacrifice (Hartford, CT: Scranton & Co., 1866), 529-535.

^ Moore, Women of the War , 533.

^ Jump up to: a b Ziparo, “Northern Women, the State, and Wartime Mobilization,” in Giesberg and Miller, 73.

^ Larry G. Eggleston, Women in the Civil War: Extraordinary Stories of Soldiers, Spies, Nurses, Doctors, Crusaders, and Others ( Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2015), 2; Michael Bronski, A Queer History of the United States (Boston, Beacon Press, 2011).

^ Eggleston, Women in the Civil War, 2.

^ Adam Gabbatt, “What Trans Soldier Albert Cashier Can Teach Trump About Patriotism,” Guardian 22 August 1017. Accessed 10 November 2018, https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/aug/22/donald-trump-transgender-military-ban-albert-cashier.

^ Jump up to: a b Michael Bronski, A Queer History of the United States (Boston, Beacon Press, 2011).

^ Lisa Tendrich Frank, “‘With Hearts Nerved by the Necessity for Prompt Action’: Southern Women, Mobilization, and the Wartime State,” in Giesberg and Miller, 56.

^ Richard Hall, Women on the Civil War Battlefront (Wichita, KS, University Press of Kansas, 2006), 49.

^ Blanton and Cook, They Fought Like Demons , 167-68

^ Lowry p.123

^ Lowry pp.124,131,132

^ Feimster, Crystal M. "General Benjamin Butler and the Threat of Sexual Violence during the American Civil War." Daedalus 138, no. 2, 126-127.

^ Jump up to: a b Kuo, Peggy (2002). "Prosecuting Crimes of Sexual Violence in an International Tribunal" . Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law . 34 : 306–307.

^ Francis Lieber; et al. (24 April 1863). "The Lieber Code of 1863" . United States War Department. Archived from the original on 2001-04-07 . Retrieved 10 March 2020 .

^ Lowry p.109

^ Lowry p.110

^ Lowry pp.113,118

^ Abramson p. 180, D'Emilio pp. 131,132

^ Lowry p. 56

^ Davis p. 280, Goldstein p. 342

^ Lowry p. 104

^ Davis pp. 231, 232

^ Clinton p.9

^ Clinton p.10

^ Clinton p.16

^ Clinton p.14

^ Clinton p.20

^ Clinton p.25

^ Clinton pp.25–26d

^ Clinton pp.27–28

^ Goldstein p.275

^ Abramson p.180


Combatants Theaters Campaigns Battles States
Involvement (by state or territory)
During the American Civil War , sexual behavior, gender roles , and attitudes were affected by the conflict, especially by the absence of menfolk at home and the emergence of new roles for women such as nursing . The advent of photography and easier media distribution, for example, allowed for greater access to sexual material for the common soldier.

During the Civil War (1861–65), the United States Sanitary Commission , a federal civilian agency, handled most of the medical and nursing care of the Union armies, together with necessary acquisition and transportation of medical supplies. Dorothea Dix , serving as the Commission's Superintendent, was able to convince the medical corps of the value of women working in 350 Commission or Army hospitals. [1] North and South, over 20,000 women volunteered to work in hospitals, usually in nursing care. [2] They assisted surgeons during procedures, gave medicines, supervised the feedings and cleaned the bedding and clothes. They gave good cheer, wrote letters the men dictated, and comforted the dying. [3] A representative nurse was Helen L. Gilson (1835–68) of Chelsea, Massachusetts, who served in Sanitary Commission. She supervised supplies, dressed wounds, and cooked special foods for patients on a limited diet. She worked in hospitals after the battles of Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg. She was a successful administrator, especially at the hospital for black soldiers at City Point, Virginia. [4] The middle class women North and South who volunteered provided vitally needed nursing services and were rewarded with a sense of patriotism and civic duty in addition to opportunity to demonstrate their skills and gain new ones, while receiving wages and sharing the hardships of the men. [5]

Mary Livermore , [6] Mary Ann Bickerdyke , and Annie Wittenmeyer played leadership roles. [5] After the war some nurses wrote memoirs of their experiences; examples include Dix, Livermore, Sarah Palmer Young , and Sarah Emma Edmonds . [7] Clara Barton (1821–1912) gained fame for her nursing work during the American Civil War . She was an energetic organizer who established the American Red Cross , which was primarily a disaster relief agency but which also supported nursing programs. [8]

Several thousand women were just as active in nursing in the Confederacy, but were less well organized and faced severe shortages of supplies and a much weaker system of 150 hospitals. Nursing and vital support services were provided not only by matrons and nurses, but also by local volunteers, slaves, free blacks, and prisoners of war. [9] [10] [11]

While men were fighting, many Northern wives needed to learn how to farm and do other manual labor. Besides having to tend to the home and children while the men were away at war, women also contributed supplies. Quilts and blankets were often given to soldiers. Some had encouraging messages sewn on them. They also sent shirts, sheets, pillows, pillowcases, coats, vests, trousers, towels, handkerchiefs, socks, bandages, canned fruits, dried fruits, butter, cheese, wine, eggs, pickles, books, and magazines. [12]

At the start of the war, Southern women zealously supported the men going off to war. They saw the men as protectors and invested heavily in the romantic idea of men fighting to defend the honor of their country, family, and way of life. [13] Mothers and wives were able to keep in contact with their loved ones who had chosen to enlist by writing them letters. African American women, on the other hand, had experienced the breakup of families for generations and were once again dealing with this issue at the outbreak of war. [14]

By summer 1861, the Union naval blockade virtually shut down the export of cotton and the import of manufactured goods. Food that formerly came overland was cut off.

Women had charge of making do. They cut back on purchases, brought out old spinning wheels and enlarged their gardens with peas and peanuts to provide clothing and food. They used ersatz substitutes when possible, but there was no real coffee and it was hard to develop a taste for the okra or chicory substitutes used. The households were severely hurt by inflation in the cost of everyday items and the shortages of food, fodder for the animals, and medical supplies for the wounded. [15] [16] The Georgia legislature imposed cotton quotas, making it a crime to grow an excess. But food shortages only worsened, especially in the towns. [17]

The overall decline in food supplies, made worse by the collapsing transportation system, led to serious shortages and high prices in urban areas. When bacon reached a dollar a pound in 1863, the poor women of Richmond, Atlanta and many other cities began to riot; they broke into shops and warehouses to seize food. The women expressed their anger at ineffective state relief efforts, speculators, merchants and planters. As wives and widows of soldiers they were hurt by the inadequate welfare system. [18] [19] [20]

Upper-class plantation mistresses often had to manage the estates which the younger men had left behind. Overseers of the slaves were exempt from the draft, and usually remained on the plantations. [21] Historian Jonathan Wiener studied the census data on plantations in black-belt counties, 1850–70, and found that the War did not drastically alter the responsibilities and roles of women. The age of the groom increased as younger women married older planters, and birth rates dropped sharply during 1863-68 during Reconstruction . However, plantation mistresses were not more likely to operate plantations than in earlier years, nor was there a lost generation of women without men. [22]

The number of female soldiers in the war is estimated at between 400 and 750, although an accurate count is impossible because the women had to disguise themselves as men. [23] A Union officer was once quoted regarding how a Union sergeant was "in violation of all military law" by giving birth to child, and this was not the only case where the true sex of a soldier was discovered due to childbirth. A captured Confederate officer whose true sex was previously unknown by the guards gave birth in a Union prison camp. [24]

The Civil War was generally a time of challenges to traditional gender norms, as women mobilized themselves to participate in the war effort and left the home in droves to serve as charity workers, nurses, clerks, farm laborers, and political activists. [25] Across the Confederacy, upper-class women assembled all-female home guard militias, drilling firearms usage and training to protect their plantations, properties, and neighborhoods from Union invasion. Military training became mandatory at some private girls' academies. [26] One female militia in LaGrange, Georgia—a uniquely militarily vulnerable city, poised halfway between the industrial powerhouse of Atlanta and the original Confederate capital at Montgomery, Alabama—engaged in diplomatic negotiations with the invading Union army in April 1865, using the threat of violence to obtain a promise that their city would not be ransacked. [27] As concerted a challenge to gender norms as these all-female militias would seem to pose, however, the participants were careful to otherwise keep well within gender norms, and to avoid the impression of usurping male protective roles. [28]

The most dramatic and extreme challenge to gender roles, then, came with those women who participated in the Civil War as fully enlisted combatants. Though not particularly well known today, it is estimated that there are over 1000 women who enlisted in both the Union and Confederate armies under assumed male identities. [29] The female soldiers were not operating within a vacuum, responding blindly to the stimulus of war. Unlike the members of the all-female militias, the female enlisted soldiers were drawn disproportionately from working- and lower-middle-class backgrounds—and therefore represented a radically different cultural milieu. Mid-nineteenth-century working-class culture, for example, was generally familiar—if not comfortable—with female cross-dressing, with the phenomenon being prominently featured in popular theatrical and literary pieces with mass audiences. [30]

Women had different motivations for joining the army, just as did their male counterparts. A common reason was to escape pre-arranged marriages. Sarah Edmonds, for example, left her home in maritime Canada and fled to the United States to avoid marriage—but took the ultimate protective step of dressing as a man and enlisting in the Union Army to avoid detection. [31] Loreta Janeta Velazquez, on the other hand, was driven to enlist by more personal motivations; inspired by the example of Joan of Arc and other historical women warriors, she was idealistic about feminine potential on the battlefield, insisting that, "when women have rushed to the battlefield, they have invariably distinguished themselves." [32] Sarah Rosetta Wakeman had been living as a man long before the outbreak of the war, hoping to find better-paying work on the riverboats of New York rather than as a female domestic servant. She was, therefore, compelled to enlist by an economic imperative; the prospect of steady pay as an enlisted soldier in the Union Army appeared to be preferable to the instability of day labor. [33] Whatever the original motivations of the individual female soldiers, however, they ultimately took part in the war on similar terms as their male brothers-in-arms.

The existence of illicit female soldiers was an open secret in both the wartime Union and Confederacy, with stories commonly shared in both soldiers' letters and newspaper articles. [34] Awareness trickled out into the general public—and civilians were fascinated by these women warriors. This curiosity is reflected in the literature of the period. Wartime romance novels idealised these women as heroines sacrificing themselves for love of country and menfolk, while Frank Moore's popular 1866 history Women and the Civil War: Their Heroism and Their Sacrifice prominently featured an entire chapter on the female soldiers of the war. [35] Although it establishes the fact that women warriors were objects of curiosity for the American public, Moore significantly softened and romanticised their experiences in order to make them more palatable to a general audience. For instance, Moore refers to one particular female soldier as an "American Joan of Arc", attempting to frame her wartime exploits within a recognisable paradigm of holy war and divine inspiration. [36]

Regardless of generally warm popular opinion, however, female soldiers actually faced significant suspicion and opposition from within the armies themselves. [37] Female soldiers were generally successful at physically disguising themselves; their shorter height, higher voices, and lack of facial hair escaped comment in an army heavily dominated by adolescent boys, while their own feminine shapes could be obscured through breast-binding. [38] Recruits deemed to be of ambiguous gender, for example, were often subjected to improvised tests to check their gendered responses. One such test was to toss a soldier an apple; if he held out his shirttails to catch the apple as if in an apron, he would be deemed to be a woman, and would be subject to further investigation. [39] Female soldiers who were most successful at blending into military life were those who had been presenting as male even before they had enlisted: Sarah Wakeman, for example, had been living as a man and working on canal boats in New York prior to joining the Union army, [40] while Jennie Hodgers had likewise assumed a masculine identity long before the outbreak of the war. [41]

Women who passed the scrutiny of their fellow soldiers, however, were nonetheless expected to perform to the same standard—and so female soldiers largely blended in with their male fellows-in-arms, performing the same duties with fairly minimal risk of exposure. [42] Those who were caught typically were exposed while wounded and receiving medical care in battlefront hospitals. [43] Others, however, escaped detection for the entire war, and returned home to resume their normal lives and feminine gender expression—with a few notable exceptions. Female veteran Sarah Edmonds, the runaway Canadian bride, lived under the masculine identity of Franklin Thompson for the rest of her life, and even was granted a pension for her service by Congress in 1886, [44] while J
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