Women during the Civil War



Women during the Civil War

I. The status of women in the 1850s

A. Separate spheres – During much of the 1800s, an ideal was set where women and men maintained separate spheres of life. In this ideal of separate spheres, men centered in the public sphere of work and politics, while women centered in the private sphere of home and family. Granted, reality seldom reflects an ideal. The general idea was that a woman focus her attentions on the moral development of the family while caring for the home because she was unfit for the sullied public world of business and politics. This ideal played out differently in the varied parts of society as life in the 19th century developed. Factors such as socio-economic status, family philosophy, education and theology and regional industrialization greatly influenced a woman’s adherence to this separatist concept.

1. Most middle-class women’s lives were confined to the home. Their daily life consisted mostly of child rearing, maintaining the home, clothing the family and feeding the family. Leisure activity was directly related to the home such as sewing for the home’s or family’s needs. Socialization also took place in the home or church. Any influence they had on the public world was to be through their fathers, husbands, brothers, and sons.

2. Working class women’s lives included home and possibly work outside the home if she worked.

B. Legal rights of women – The legal rights of women were primarily governed by the states and therefore varied from state to state.

Right to own Real and personal property – A woman’s married status often determined her right to own real and personal property. In most states married women did not have the right to own real or personal property. This was because most States’ laws were based on English Common Law where a single woman maintained the same property rights as a man prior to marriage, while once married in a state of coverture, a woman’s legal identity combined with that of her husband. In the married state, her property, wages, and any inheritance became his to own, manage, and sell without her consent. She was unable to sign a contract, purchase or sell property, or sue without his participation. [An Economic Necessity: Women in Colonial America, Developed by Women in American Culture, Title IV, ESEA, Northfield, Minnesota]

a. Laws affecting the property rights of women.

• Connecticut 1809 – Allowed women to write wills.

• New York State’s Married Women’s Property Act passed April 7, 1848 gave women the right to continue ownership over property owned by her prior to marriage. This property was protected against being sold by the husband or used to settle his debts. The act also gave married women the right to own personal and real property acquired during the marriage as well as the right to receive by gift, grant or bequest property. Laws similar to this were passed in other states in the 1850s.

• New York State’s Married Women’s Property Law passed in 1860 added to the 1848 Act, giving women legal control over their own wages, the ability to buy, sell or trade property and joint custody of children with their husband. It also gave women the right to sue and be sued. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony helped get this law passed.

1. Rights to wages – In most states, a woman’s husband had legal rights to his wife’s wages. A single woman had sole control over her own money.

2. Types of jobs held by women

a. Basics

• Women could earn money from home by doing piece work, taking in laundry, plaiting straw, selling eggs, etc.

• Women were more likely to work outside of the home if they were single or if they lived in New England or the frontier.

b. Regional influences

c. Jobs traditionally held by men to note due to later war influence

• Nurses

• Teachers

C. Social position of women

1. A Woman’s identity - Often a woman’s identity was defined by her relationship to a man. Prior to marriage she was identified through her father; during marriage through her husband; during widowhood through her son. This identity often included financial ability and social positioning.

II. Women during the Civil War

A. Women at home

1. Family – Wives, Daughters, Mothers

2. Home responsibilities

3. Work/financial responsibilities

B. Women in the Community

1. Work/financial responsibilities

2. War/soldier support and Aide Societies

a. Aide Societies

• Collecting materials

• Raising funds

b. Emotional and religious support

C. Women participation

1. Nurses

a. Field Nurses

b. Hospital Nurses

2. Spies

a. Those accused

b. Those by chance

c. Those who were

3. Christian Commission

4. Local Aid Societies

a. New England Soldier’s Aid Society

b. Rochester Soldier’s Aid Society

c.

5. Sanitary Commissions

a. The United States Sanitary Commission

The US Sanitary Commission was organized June 9, 1861 to combat the unhealthy, unsanitary conditions in military camps and hospitals. Diseases like malaria, dysentery, diarrhea and typhoid ran rampant at times. It is estimated that for every man killed in battle, two died from disease. The USSC worked with the Army Medical Department to improve sanitation and conditions for soldiers. This included the construction of well ventilated hospitals, the creation of a nursing corps, collection and organization of food, clothing, personal and medical supplies.

The USSC was run primarily by civilians. It was divided into three departments:

The Department of Preventative Services inspected camps and hospitals.

The Department of General Relief managed the supplies of food, clothing, bandages, furniture and medicines.

The Department of Special Relief included the development of Soldiers’ Homes providing shelter, food and medical care for soldiers.

6. Women as soldiers

III. Notable individuals during the Civil War

Harriet Beecher Stowe – Abolitionist who encouraged Northerners to aide slaves reach freedom. Stowe was the author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1851) and A Key to Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1853).

Clara Barton – Prior to the war she was a teacher in Massachusetts and the first woman to work in the US Patent Office. During the war she was a battlefield nurse. At the end of the war she helped identify missing and unknown soldiers. She founded the American Red Cross in 1881.

Rose O'Neal Greenhow – Greenhow was a spy for the Confederacy during the early years of the war including the battle of Bull Run/Manassas. She traveled to Britain and France to rouse sympathies for the Confederacy. She died at sea in 1864.

Dr. Mary Edwards Walker – She became a doctor in June, 1855 when she graduated from Syracuse Medical College. She was an acting assistant surgeon in the US Patent Office Hospital, then a field surgeon for the US Army. She was the only woman to receive the Congressional Medal of Honor, for her service during the Civil War. She was a proponent of women’s rights and dress reform who wore Turkish trousers instead of common woman’s dress. (Oswego, NY 1832 - )

Mary Todd Lincoln – Wife of President Lincoln. She was born in Kentucky she was seen by many Northerners as possibly having Southern sympathies though she adamantly supported abolition.

Varnia Jefferson Davis – Wife of Jefferson Davis, Confederate President.

Harriet Tubman – Former Maryland slave who helped hundreds of slaves escape to freedom via the Underground Railroad through New York State. During the war she was a cook, a nurse and a spy for the Union. She worked with a network of former slaves who reported on Confederate camps and troop movements.

Pauline Cushman – At the beginning of the war she was an actress in Louisville. She became a spy for the Union army following Confederate troops.

Dorothea Lynde Dix- Dix was the Superintendent of Nurses for the Union Army. She was an advocate for prison reform and worked to improve conditions for the mentally ill.

Elizabeth Cady Stanton – One of the first leaders of the women’s rights and suffrage movements. She formed with Susan B. Anthony the National Woman Suffrage Association in 1869.

Sarah E. Thompson – Worked with her husband in the Greenville, Tennessee area organizing Union sympathizers.

Resources

Employments of Women: A Cyclopaedia of Woman’s Work by Virginia Penny – Boston: Walker, Wise & Company, 1863.

Nurses My Story of the War: A Woman's Narrative of Four Years' Personal Experience as Nurse in the Union Army, and in Relief Work at Home, in Hospitals, Camps, ... the Front, During the War of the Rebellion by Mary A. Livermore A.D. Worthington, 1894.

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