Clara Barton Chronology, Assistance in the Civil War
This is an official timeline of Barton´s aid from the National Park Service detailing the events of the Civil War. This timeline was specifically narrowed down to the actions of Clara Barton during this period.
"April 12, 1861
The Civil War began with the firing on Ft. Sumter, South Carolina." - National Park Service
"April 19, 1861
Riots in Baltimore, Maryland - En route to defend the nation’s capital, the 6th Massachusetts Infantry was attacked by mobs of southern-sympathizing Baltimoreans as the soldiers marched across town. They arrived in Washington, DC, beaten and with several members of their regiment dead. Miss Barton found them temporarily quartered in the Senate Chamber of the US Capitol and provided supplies from her own household for their comfort. The overwhelming response to her request for additional supplies for the troops marked the start of her career as the Angel of the Battlefield." - National Park Service
"July 21, 1861
Battle of First Manassas (Bull Run), Virginia - Miss Barton tended to wounded soldiers as they arrived in Washington, DC. She established a distribution agency after receiving additional supplies sent in response to an advertisement in the Worcester Spy." - National Park Service
"August 3, 1862
Miss Barton gained official permission to transport supplies to battlefields." - National Park Service
"August 9, 1862
Battle of Cedar Mountain (Culpepper), Virginia - This was the first documented battle at which Clara Barton served in the field. Arriving on August 13, she spent two days and nights tending the wounded. Before leaving, she provided assistance at a field hospital for Confederate prisoners.
August 28-30, 1862
Battle of Second Manassas (Bull Run), Virginia.
September 1, 1862
Battle of Chantilly, Virginia - Arriving at Fairfax Station after the Battle of Second Manassas, Miss Barton tended to the wounded and prepared the injured for evacuation by train to Washington, DC.
September 14, 1862
Battle of South Mountain, Maryland - Miss Barton aided the wounded at battles near Harper’s Ferry and South Mountain." - National Park Service
"September 17, 1862
Battle of Antietam, Maryland - Miss Barton and her wagons arrived on the field with the Army of the Potomac prior to the battle. She provided surgeons with desperately needed medical supplies. During the battle she was nearly killed when a bullet passed through the sleeve of her dress, killing the wounded man she was attending. Although lacking medical training, at the insistence of a wounded soldier, she extracted a bullet from his cheek, using her pocket knife. Working for several days following the conflict, Miss Barton was weakened by typhoid fever." - National Park Service
(This 1864 lithograph shows the charge of Ohio infantrymen against North Carolinian troops in the Battle of South Mountain in Maryland, which took place on the morning of September 14, 1862 and was a prelude to the Battle of Antietam. Image from the Library of Congress.)
"Sept. - Nov. 1862
Miss Barton travelled with the Army of the Potomac as it pursued the retreating Confederates into Virginia. She provided aid to the wounded at several minor skirmishes and accompanied patients to hospitals in Washington, DC.
December 13, 1862
Battle of Fredericksburg, Virginia - Miss Barton assisted in a hospital of the IX Corps, which was established at the Lacy House (Chatham Manor). She remained in the field through most of the month, following the route of the Union Army.
April 1863
Miss Barton arrived at Hilton Head, South Carolina, in preparation for the anticipated bombardment of Charleston. She joined Captain David Barton, her brother and an Army Quartermaster, and Steven E. Barton, her fifteen year old nephew who was serving in the military telegraph office. She met and befriended Colonel John J. Elwell." - National Park Service
(Bombardment of Fort Wagner, Charleston, South Carolina. New York Public Library Digital Collections)
"August 10 - 11, 1863
Siege of Ft. Wagner, South Carolina - Miss Barton helped to establish field hospitals and distributed supplies following the failed assaults.
January - May, 1864
Miss Barton returned to Washington, DC, to collect supplies and to recuperate.
May 1864
Battles of the Wilderness and Spotsylvania Court House near Fredericksburg, Virginia - Miss Barton arranged for the opening of private homes for the care of wounded with the assistance of Senator Henry Wilson, chairman of the Military Affairs Committee." - National Park Service
"June 23, 1864
Miss Barton is placed in charge of diet and nursing at a X Corps hospital near Point of Rocks, Virginia, appointed by Army of the James Commander Major General Benjamin F. Butler. The "flying hospital" served the wounded from the almost daily fighting outside Petersburg." - National Park Service
"March 1865
With the assistance of Senator Wilson, Miss Barton won the approval of President Abraham Lincoln to address the problem of large numbers of missing soldiers. By authority of the President, she established The Office of Correspondence with Friends of the Missing Men of the United States Army on March 11. Recognition by the War Department followed two months later. She directed a four-year search for missing men.
April 9, 1865
Confederate General Robert E. Lee surrendered to General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House, Virginia, signalling the end of the Civil War.
Summer 1865
Andersonville, Georgia - Aided largely by records kept by prison survivor Dorance Atwater, Miss Barton assisted in the locating and marking of nearly 13,000 Union graves. She raised the US flag at the dedication of Andersonville National Cemetery on August 17, 1865." - National Park Service
(Clara Barton raising the flag at Andersonville on August 17, 1865, from Harper's Weekly. Library of Congress)
(Roll of Missing Men No 1, Missing Soldiers Office Museum)
"Washington, D. C, June 1. 1865.
SOLDIERS AND BROTHERS: Please examine this roll; and if you know what became of any man here named, or have facts of interest to surviving friends, communicate the same to me by letter, as soon as possible, with your address in full. If any one sees his own name, or that of a comrade whom he knows to be living, please inform me, that it may be withheld from future roll. Letters of inquiry for missing soldiers may be brief should contain, the name, regiment company and State to which they belonged, with the full address of the writer, plainly written. Attention will no longer be confined to those who have been prisoners, but an effort will be made to ascertain the fate of all missing men of the United States army during the war. If any letter of inquiry fails to receive an answer, please write again. No apologies are necessary, and no letter will be neglected." - Clara Barton
"1869
Miss Barton closed The Office of Correspondence with Friends of the Missing Men of the United States Army, having received and answered 63,182 letters and identified 22,000 missing men.
September 1869
On the advice of her doctor, Miss Barton travelled to Europe to regain her health. While visiting Switzerland, she met Dr. Louis Appia, and, for the first time, read about the International Red Cross." - National Park Service
Many of her experiences during the Civil War influenced her to form the American Red Cross. These experiences also associated her with the suffrage movement, as she was able to meet Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. She delivered over 200 lectures throughout the northeast and midwest regarding her Civil War experiences, and shared platforms with other prominent figures during this time.