|
by Jim Temmer
Historian James Temmer serves as site director for
SHSW's H. H. Bennett Studio & History Center.
| |
|
| Women did more than wait for a monthly state check
that might not come. They picked up the harnesses, hammers, and tools
that men had laid aside on their way to war. |
|
|
The Civil War has been described in domestic terms"Brother against
brother," "A house divided against itself cannot stand" yet we often overlook
the tremendous impact the Civil War had on domestic life. In Wisconsin,
as in other parts of the country, women played vital roles in the success
of the troops in the field.
Women were expected to support the soldiers medically, spiritually, and
economically. In Wisconsin, as elsewhere, small communities had serious
religious, class, and political differences. However, women set these
social barriers aside and banded together as never before to form the
Woman's Soldiers Aid Society. This organization sent medical inspectors
to report on and improve sanitary conditions among the troops and in medical
treatment centers. They invented hospital cars for human transportation
of the wounded and they distributed thousands of dollars worth of what
they called "sanitary supplies." The Soldiers Aid Society also hired nurses
for Army hospitals and organized soup distribution for soldiers. Many
women pointed to the recent example of Florence Nightingale's tending
British troops in the Crimean War as a goal. Nationally, the United States
Sanitary Commission was the largest volunteer organization in the history
of the nation up to that time.
The Soldiers Aid Society tried to lift soldier's spirits by gathering
and sending care packages to the front. Boxes of tasty cookies, pastries,
jellies, and meats were packed along with the latest news from home to
keep up morale. This was done while many women on the home front could
have used a boost as well. Women with husbands, brothers, or sons at war
would make daily treks to the post office to see if their loved ones'
names were on the latest postings of killed and wounded. Loneliness and
fear were their constant companions. With most of the traditional income-earners
off to war, many women were hard-pressed to make ends meet. Each private
in the Union army was to receive $13 per month. The State of Wisconsin
promised an additional $5 to wives of volunteers and $2 per month for
each child. This money was very slow to arrive, if it was delivered at
all. Priority was placed on the troops in the field, and the people back
home came in a distant second.
Women did more than wait for a monthly state check that might not come.
They picked up the harnesses, hammers, and tools that men had laid aside
on their way to war. Women filled traditionally male roles and kept the
Wisconsin economy afloat. Women were in the fields everywhere, driving
the reapers, bindin, and shocking, and loading grain. Wisconsin agricultural
production would have ceased without women's labor. Some of the changes
in women's economic roles continued after the Civil War. In 1860, just
before the start of the war, 773 women were involved in "commercial and
industrial pursuits." By 1870 that number had increased by over 500 percent.
The Wisconsin home front during the Civil War was a place of hardship
and fear for many women, yet these same people put the well-being of their
loved-ones and that of the Union ahead of their own needs. The American
Civil War profoundly changed our nation and our families.
|