life during wartime u.s. women and the military civil war - wwi

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Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

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Page 1: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

Life During Wartime

U.S. Women and the Military

Civil War - WWI

Page 2: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

The Civil War

• Initially underestimated

• Ultimately, four years, hundreds of thousands of lives, incredible amounts of material resources

• The longer the duration of a war, the more military leaders looked to women as a resource when additional labor was needed

Page 3: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

The work they did

• Thousands of women worked in government-owned arsenals and armories

• Medical support and relief efforts

• Women’s Central Association for Relief– Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell

• U.S. Sanitary Commission– Dorothea Dix

Page 4: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI
Page 5: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI
Page 6: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

The bending, as usual, of gender boundaries during wartime

• Women as combatants and commanders– Madame Truchin– Kady Brownell– Bridget Divers– Anna Ella Carroll– Rosetta Wakeman– Frances Clalin– Sarah Emma Edmonds– Sarah Malinda Blaylock

Page 7: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

Kady Brownell (1842 - ?)

• May 1861: Company 11, Rhode Island Infantry

• Sergeant and color-bearer

• Participated in taking of Roanoke Island, January 1862

Page 8: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

Francis Clalin

Page 9: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

Sarah Emma Edmonds Seelye

• In 1862 at least four women, including Sarah Edmonds Seelye, converged on Antietam, Maryland. With more than 30,000 casualties, September 17 was the single bloodiest day of the Civil War

Page 10: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

Albert D.J. Cashier

Page 11: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

Anna Ella Carroll

• Spied for the Union• Masterminded the

Tennessee Campaign, credited with winning the Civil War for the north

• Her achievement unrecognized

Page 12: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

Dr. Mary Walker

Page 13: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI
Page 14: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

Spanish-American War

• Created substantial need for military nurses

• First time in Army history large numbers of women hired to serve as contract nurses in military hospitals

• Dr. Anita Newcomb McGee nurses’ bureau chief

Page 15: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

Post-Spanish American War Period

• Army and Navy leaders take steps to officially include women in American military

• 1901: Congress establishes Army nurse Corps as auxiliary; Navy follows seven years later

• Women do not have full military status

Page 16: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

World War I

• First war where women could serve in non-nursing positions

• Recruited women for position of yeoman

• Marine Corps began its own program in 1918

• Army still only hired nurses

Page 17: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

Flu epidemic complicates war

• 1918: 1500 nurses requested for troops in France

• More than 10,000 female military nurses served overseas in WWI; over 34,000 women served in Army, Navy, Marines, or Coast Guard.

• Three women received Distinguished Service Cross; 23 received Distinguished Service Medal

Page 18: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

How were women viewed within military?

• Three general trends:

1. military men remained ambivalent to women in Armed Forces, especially in peacetime.

Page 19: Life During Wartime U.S. Women and the Military Civil War - WWI

2. Senior military leaders tended to tolerate women’s participation in the military during wartime.

3. In years preceding WWI, American military leaders concluded that military women were not just a poor substitute for men; questions of women and military then changed to not whether women should serve, but how.