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Women in the CW: An Encyclopedia

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  • Women in the CW: An Encyclopedia

    Much to my surprise and delight, Texas Tech University actually shipped me a 2004 book on interlibrary loan that I thought wouldn't circulate at all--Harper, Judith E. _Women During the Civil War: An Encyclopedia_. New York: Routledge, 2004. 472 pp.; bibliography pp. 433-448. Here are the topics. If you were handed a short answer/identify and give the significance of test, how would you rate?

    Abolitionists
    African-American Women
    --Free African-American Women
    --Enslaved Women
    Agricultural Women
    Alcott, Louisa May
    Anthony, Susan B.
    Antietam (Sharpsburg), Battle of
    Artists
    Barton, Clara
    Battle of the Handkerchiefs
    Bickerdyke, Mary Ann
    Blalock, Malinda Pritchard
    Bowser, Mary Elizabeth
    Boyd, Belle
    Bread Rebellions
    Brown, Clara
    Brownell, Kady Southwell
    Businesswomen
    Camp Life
    Carroll, Anna Ella
    Cary, Mary Ann Shadd
    Cashier, Albert D. J. (Jennie Hodgers)
    Catholic Nuns
    Chesnut, Mary Boykin
    Child, Lydia Maria
    Contraband Relief Association
    Contraband Women
    Coppin, Fanny Jackson
    Courtship and Marriage
    Cumming, Kate
    Cushman, Pauline
    Davis, Rebecca Harding
    Davis, Varina Howell
    Diaries
    Dickey, Sarah
    Dickinson, Anna
    Dickinson, Emily
    Dix, Dorothea
    Doctors
    Draft Riots
    Edmonds, Sarah Emma
    Edmondson, Belle
    Education
    Etheridge, Annie
    Evans, Augusta Jane
    Family Life
    --Reproduction and Birth Control
    --Childrearing
    Fern, Fanny
    Fort Sumter
    Forten, Charlotte
    Fremont, Jessie Benton
    General Order No. 28
    Gettysburg, Battle of
    Gibbons, Abby Hopper
    Girlhood and Adolescence
    Government Girls
    Greenhow, Rose O’Neal
    Guerrilla War
    Gunboat Societies
    Hale, Sarah Josepha
    Hamilton, Gail
    Harper, Frances Watkins
    Haviland, Laura Smith
    Hawks, Esther Hill
    Hopkins, Juliet Opie
    Hospital Ships
    Howe, Julia Ward
    Immigrant Women
    Industrial Women
    --Sewing Women
    --Ordnance Workers
    Invasion and Occupation
    --Occupation
    Jacobs, Harriet
    Keckley, Elizabeth
    Kemble, Fanny
    Larcom, Lucy
    LeConte, Emma
    Lewis, Edmonia
    Lincoln, Mary Todd
    Literary Women
    Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice
    McCord, Louisa Cheves
    Mexican-American Women
    Military Women
    Mitchell, Maria
    Morgan, Sarah
    Mormon Women
    Mountain Charley
    Native American Women
    --California’s Indian Wars
    --Native American Refugees
    --Sioux Uprising of 1862
    --Bear River Massacre
    --The “Long Walk”
    --The Sand Creek Massacre
    Nurses
    Patriotism
    Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer
    Pember, Phoebe Levy
    Phillips, Eugenia Levy
    Pleasant, Mary Ellen
    Prostitutes
    Ream, Vinnie
    Refugees
    Religion
    Remond, Sarah Parker
    Roswell Women
    Sanitary Fairs
    Secession
    Sherman’s March to the Sea
    Slater, Sarah Gilbert
    Slavery and Emancipation
    --Emancipation
    Soldiers’ Aid Societies
    Spies and Espionage
    Stanton, Elizabeth Cady
    Stowe, Harriet Beecher
    Surratt, Mary
    Swisshelm, Jane Grey
    Taylor, Susie Baker King
    Teachers of the Freedpeople
    Tompkins, Sally
    Treasury Girls
    Truth, Sojourner
    Tubman, Harriet
    Turchin, Nadine Lvova
    United States Christian Commission
    United States Sanitary Commission
    Van Lew, Elizabeth
    Velazquez, Loreta Janeta
    Vicksburg
    Wakeman, Sarah Rosetta
    Walker, Mary Edwards
    Western Women
    Women’s Central Association of Relief
    Woman’s National Loyal League
    Women and Politics
    Women’s Rights Movement
    Zakrzewska, Marie

    Each article has cross references and 1-4 sources. At the time of the war, nobody would recognize all of these names, but looking back it's an interesting mix of people, topics, and organizations. More reading to do!

    Vicki Betts
    vbetts@gower.net

  • #2
    Re: Women in the CW: An Encyclopedia

    Originally posted by vbetts
    Much to my surprise and delight, Texas Tech University actually shipped me a 2004 book on interlibrary loan that I thought wouldn't circulate at all--Harper, Judith E. _Women During the Civil War: An Encyclopedia_. New York: Routledge, 2004. 472 pp.; bibliography pp. 433-448. Here are the topics. If you were handed a short answer/identify and give the significance of test, how would you rate?

    Each article has cross references and 1-4 sources. At the time of the war, nobody would recognize all of these names, but looking back it's an interesting mix of people, topics, and organizations. More reading to do!

    Vicki Betts
    vbetts@gower.net
    Vicki,

    I also have the book and will be reviewing it for the summer issue of the SWCW newsletter. I have found the book impressive and the extensive bibliography is great.
    Virginia Mescher
    vmescher@vt.edu
    http://www.raggedsoldier.com

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Women in the CW: An Encyclopedia

      I'm very much looking forward to this -- the list included nearly everyone I could think of -- only ones I didn't see were:

      Anne Wittenmeyer and the Keokuk (Iowa) Soldier's Aid Society (instrumental in early Western women's efforts to funnel resources to Western troops, especially Iowa men up and down the Mississippi),

      the Grimke sisters, though I'm sure they are included under "Abolitionists."

      Lucy Holcomb Pickens? The Face on the Confderate currency?

      Constance Cary? Hetty Cary Pegrem?

      With the exception of Mrs. Wittenmeyer, these are all relative quibbles. The book sounds like a fantastic resource,
      Karin Timour
      Period Knitting -- Socks, Camp Hats and Balaclavas
      Atlantic Guard Soldiers' Aid Society
      Email: Ktimour@aol.com
      Last edited by KarinTimour; 05-17-2004, 11:59 PM.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Women in the CW: An Encyclopedia

        I thought Annie Wittenmyer deserved her own article, too, but she does show up on two pages of the USCC along with the Keokuk Ladies' Soldiers' Aid Society, and on one page of the USSC.

        The Grimke Sisters do not appear at all, although Francis J. Grimke is mentioned as marrying Charlotte Forten.

        No Lucy Holcolb Pickens.

        Constance Cary Harrison appears in one quote, and in a discussion of the ANV battle flag. Hetty is also mentioned with the flag.

        I would have liked a line or two on Carrie Bell Sinclair under "literary women," and possibly Mollie Moore. I just looked up Kate Stone in the index and found "As Kate Stone of Virginia explained, "We should make a stand for our rights--and a nation fighting for its own homes and liberty cannot be overwhelmed." Oops!!! Louisiana and Texas are about as far as you can get from Virginia in the Confederacy. While General Order No. 28 (New Orleans) rated its own article, General Order No. 11 (Missouri) was not even mentioned in the article on Refugees.

        I may think of a few more omissions/corrections as I make my way through the book. I sure do wish my library could afford to buy it, though.

        Vicki Betts
        vbetts@gower.net

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Women in the CW: An Encyclopedia

          I may think of a few more omissions/corrections as I make my way through the book. I sure do wish my library could afford to buy it, though.

          Vicki Betts
          vbetts@gower.net[/QUOTE]

          Vicki,

          I've seen some inaccuries but I expect those came from the secondary sources she used and I wished she had included some notable women also. I realize that she could not include everyone that researchers would like her to discuss. While it isn't perfect, the book does give more coverage to mid-19th century women than most other books do, and if the reader wishes to learn more about a particular entry, the author does provide specific sources to that subject or woman.

          Some entries that I wanted to learn more about made me start a list of "books to get and people and subjects to research." Ah, maybe in my next lifetime, I'll have more time to research them.

          My main problem with the book was the price at $95 and that is steep for any individual, but it is not out of line for a textbook.
          Virginia Mescher
          vmescher@vt.edu
          http://www.raggedsoldier.com

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Women in the CW: An Encyclopedia

            If it's got Fanny Fern AND Mary Boykin Chestnut, it's got to be a great book! :D
            Just my two cents cast in the pot.
            Mfr,
            Judith Peebles
            Mfr,
            Judith Peebles.
            No Wooden Nutmegs Sold Here.
            [B]Books![B][/B][/B] The Original Search Engine.

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