Note—Last week we looked at English nursing hero Florence
Nightingale with a brief comparison to American Clara Barton. Now Barton and her creation the American Red
Cross take center stage.
On May 21, 1881 Clara
Barton, already famed for her tireless work as a Civil War nurse,
organized the founding meeting of
the Association of the American Red
Cross (later the American Red Cross)
in the parlor her Washington, DC apartment. By August, she had organized the first three local chapters in her summer country home of Danville, New York in the upstate Finger Lakes region and in near-by Rochester, and Syracuse.
Within a month the fledgling chapters were mobilized to aid the victims of a
massive forest fire in eastern Michigan.
It was living example of Barton’s aim to not only provide aid in
time of war, but during domestic
disasters as well. It might have
quelled opposition in the Senate to ratifying the Treaty of the Geneva Convention which
among other things allowed the establishment of an American Chapter of the International
Red Cross.
The Senate finally approved the treaty in March of 1882 and chartered the American Red Cross. Barton, who had campaigned to establish the organization for years, was naturally
elected the first President, a
position she held for the next 23 years.
Barton was born on Christmas
Day 1821 to an ardent Universalist family
in Oxford, one of the western Massachusetts towns that had been a
cradle of the denomination. Her beloved father was a Revolutionary War veteran and her high-strung mother was subject to fits of abusive
rage. The youngest of five children,
small for her age and suffering from a lisp,
she was teased and tormented by her siblings.
Yet at an early age she had to learn to take care of an
older sister who suffered a mental break down and was confined to
an upper room of the house and a brother
who was severely injured in a
fall. She changed his bandages, administered pain killing medicine, and tended his
needs for two years then suffered her own deep
depression when he recovered sufficiently no longer needed her.
In her late teens she
was put to work, initially against her will, as a school teacher in an effort to overcome her paralyzing shyness. Much to
her own and everyone else’s amazement she excelled managing a class of 40
including rambunctious young men
near her own age.
29-year-old school teacher Clara Barton.
When her school won a prize
for being “most disciplined” she
explained to astonished officials that no discipline was ever needed because,
“When they [the boys] found that I was as agile and as strong as themselves,
that my throw was as sure and as straight as theirs, their respect knew no
bounds.”
After that she was a sought-after teacher and commanded the same pay as veteran male pedagogues. She taught for more than 10 years before
enrolling in the Clinton Liberal
Institute in New York State for formal training.
After graduation Barton moved to Bordentown to establish her own school which was soon so successful that a large new building
was constructed and additional instructors hired. But when the trustees brought in a man to run it and paid him $600 a year more
then she had received, she angrily resigned
and moved to Washington where using some political
influence she became the first woman appointed
as a clerk in the Patent Office and made a man’s salary.
But she was harassed
by her male co-workers and the
subject of rumors of sexual indiscretion
as a single woman living alone in the city.
When the election of Democrat
James Buchanan as President ended her Whig
patronage position she was not
unhappy.
Returning to Massachusetts she found herself drifting
without purpose and unable to find regular employment for four years. She studied French and art and
battled bouts of immobilizing depression.
Clara Barton bitterly resented being paid less than a male teacher at the school she founded and later loosing her job as a full Patent Clerk only to return to the Department as a lowly copyist. In her later work as a leading Suffragist she made equal pay for women her own personal demand.
With the election of Republican
Abraham Lincoln and the patronage of her friend Senator Henry Wilson she was able to get a temporary appointment as a copyist
at the Patent Office making far less than she had as a full clerk in what was
regarded as “an experiment” in
employing women. She eagerly took up the
task of “being a pioneer.”
In April of l861 the men of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment, some of them Barton’s former
students, arrived in Washington after being attacked by mobs in Baltimore.
She and her sister Sally
Vassall greeted the men at the train
station and took seriously injured men to Vassall’s home to nurse their
wounds. And when she discovered that the
men’s baggage had been stolen in Baltimore she rounded up donations of food, clothing, and supplies for the regiment from local merchants.
She soon was tending New
York and New Jersey troops as
well, including more former students.
When the grateful men wrote home about her efforts, supplies began being
sent to her. After tending the
casualties from the first big battle,
the disastrous engagement at Manassas, she
began to systematically appeal for aid to
groups like the Worcester Ladies’ Relief
Committee back home, providing them with detailed lists of what was needed
and how to pack it.
She returned home to attend her father’s last illness, but
was soon back in Washington and somehow wrangled a Quartermaster’s Pass to get to the front line. She arrived with
six wagon loads of supplies shortly
after the Battle of Culpepper in Virginia and spent non-stop days
tending the wounded, including captive Confederates.
Soon she considered herself, and was considered by grateful
troops, a member of the Army of the
Potomac, arriving with her wagons on battlefields including Second Manassas, Antietam and Fredericksburg. The Twenty-first
Massachusetts held a dress parade
in her honor and made her an honorary
member. She often wore a short-waisted soldier’s jacket over her
long skirts and kepi on her
head. She suffered a life threatening bout of typhoid fever but yearned to return to
the front.
Barton's Civil War bane and rival Dorothea Dix was already a famed reformer, mental health pioneer, and early Suffragist when she was appointed official head of the Army nursing corps. Dix disdained Barton's individual approach and tried to freeze her out of service whenever she could.
But when Unitarian minister
Henry Whitney Bellows organized the Sanitary Commission to serve the Army
and Dorthea Dix, a Unitarian
laywoman organized a formal nursing
corps, Barton found her individual volunteer efforts were officially discouraged and that female
nurses were to be limited to duty in
rear echelon hospitals. Barton preferred to work independently and bristled at the restrictions Dix placed on her nurses.
She got special
permission to accompany her brother David,
the boy she had once nursed who was now Quartermaster
of the Eighteenth Army Corps which
was dispatched in April 1862 to lay siege
to Charleston, South Carolina. At Hilton
Head she found the siege and bombardment
of the port and its harbor forts to be dull compared to the
Virginia and she toyed with leaving
but was persuaded to stay by handsome Col.
John H. Elwell, a married officer
with whom she none-the-less fell in love—a
first time experience for the forty year
old spinster.
Nursing the Civil War wounded.
Some biographers
have described Barton as “plain,”
but contemporary photographs show a trim, attractive woman. She was
also spirited and intellectually challenging. An affair,
or at least an intense romance, was
inevitable.
When the siege of Ft.
Wagner turned into an intense battle, Barton moved to the front with fellow
Universalist nurse Mary Gage. She saw Elwell wounded and brought him to
safety before returning to tend others.
But local commanders were not as sympathetic to her as were those of the
Army of the Potomac and despite her long hours of service they made her life
difficult until she collapsed of exhaustion and was evacuated back to Hilton Head where the recovering Elwell nursed
her.
When she tried to return to the front, she was told that
only Dix’s nurses would be allowed.
Bitter and disillusioned, she turned to work with Mary
Gage’s mother, the Suffragist Frances Dana Gage among freed slaves in the area. Gage expanded her horizons turning her more
explicitly to a Feminist social
consciousness. They formed a bond
that lasted until Gage’s death in 1884.
She returned to Washington in December 1863 and went into
one of her periodic depressions that accompanied times of enforced
inactivity.
When General Ulysses
Grant’s bloody spring offensive
in 1864 began to overwhelm the Sanitary Commission, Barton received permission
to work in the hospitals at Fredericksburg. Her friend, Massachusetts General Benjamin Butler, finally gave
her permission to join a forward field
hospital.
At war’s end Barton found herself the most famous woman in America.
In one of his final
acts, President Lincoln assigned her the daunting task of locating
missing prisoners of war and
informing families of their fate. She
read and answered thousands of letters from families while pouring over shoddy and incomplete Confederate
records.
In 1867 she undertook a nationwide speaking tour presenting her lecture Work and Incidents of Army Life. The tour provided her first personal income since leaving the
Patent Office at the outset of the war.
She also began collaborating with Susan
B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady
Stanton in advocating for women’s
suffrage. She was especially valued
for her ability to reach veterans
and enlisting their support with the appeal, “Soldiers! I have worked for you
and I ask you, now, one and all, that you consider the wants of my people. . .
. God only knows women were your friends in time of peril and you should be
[theirs] now.”
She split with the most militant
feminists in support of her friend Fredrick
Douglas when she endorsed the Fifteenth
Amendment which gave Black men
but not women the right to vote.
Financially
secure for the first time in her adult
life, Barton was traveling in Europe when
the Franco-Prussian War broke out in
1870. She offered her services to the
new International Red Cross. She set up aid centers behind the lines of each combatant, but especially in Strasbourg, Germany and later in Paris.
Barton (standing) organized aid centers behind the lines of both combatants in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870.
After the war she was decorated
by both governments for her impartial
service and her work with prisoners of war.
She helped introduce the family reunion methods she had developed after
the Civil War to the International Red Cross.
Returning to the U.S. in 1873 with her health broken, Barton spent three years
recuperating in the family home at Worcester and in Danville. She corresponded with the President of the International Red
Cross to ask how she could form an American section. Dr.
Louis Appia replied that she first needed to win public support, get the
approval of the President, and finally, get Congress to approve the Geneva
Convention. She set to work with her pen
placing articles in women’s magazines,
veteran’s publications and national newspapers.
But President Rutherford
B. Hayes and many Senators were
hostile. In 1877 she felt well enough to
travel twice to Washington to personally lobby, however fruitlessly. Finally with the election of James Garfield in 1880 she had an ally in the Presidency. Within months of his inauguration, she held
her organizing meeting.
Barton rushed relief to victims of the Johnstown, Pennsylvania flood in 1888, one of the Red Cross's earliest forays into disaster relief. Widespread praise for the efforts helped overcome Senate opposition to ratifying the Geneva Convention and chartering the American Red Cross.
Her long stewardship of the Red Cross was not without its difficulties. Although the organization responded to such
disasters as the Johnstown Flood and
Galveston Hurricane standards of
local chapters were uneven, and fundraising
a chronic problem. Barton’s go-it-alone style of administration was often ineffective.
In fact like many visionary
founders, she was not a good
administrator. Her failings and the
failings of the organization were often criticized in the press. Disgruntled former associates challenged her
for leadership and set up rival
organizations. Despite continuing to
recognized and decorated abroad, Barton felt besieged at home.
By 1904 the Red Cross had undergone reorganization, not entirely to her approval, and Barton was
carefully eased out as President.
She flirted with a rival
organization, The National First Aid
Association of America, but it and its functions of training local volunteers were soon absorbed back into the Red
Cross.
Responding to requests from children Barton wrote a juvenile book, The Story of My Childhood,
which was published in 1907. She enjoyed
attending and being honored at Suffrage
conventions and Grand Army of the
Republic encampments.
Clara Barton died of pneumonia
at the home on the grounds of the Red Cross Headquarters she built at Glen Echo, Maryland on April 12, 1912 at the age of 90.
Pretty good for a “frail waif.”
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