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This Birth Place of Souls - The Civil War Nursing Diary of Harriet Eaton (Hardcover)
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This Birth Place of Souls - The Civil War Nursing Diary of Harriet Eaton (Hardcover)
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After the battle of Antietam in 1862, Harriet Eaton traveled to
Virginia from her home in Portland, Maine, to care for soldiers in
the Army of the Potomac. Portland's Free Street Baptist Church,
with liberal ties to abolition, established the Maine Camp Hospital
Association and made the widowed Eaton its relief agent in the
field. One of many Christians who believed that patriotic activism
could redeem the nation, Eaton quickly learned that war was no
respecter of religious principles. Doing the work of nurse and
provisioner, Eaton tended wounded men and those with smallpox and
diphtheria during two tours of duty. She preferred the first tour,
which ended after the battle of Chancellorsville in 1863, to the
second, more sedentary, assignment at City Point, Virginia, in
1864. There the impositions of federal bureaucracy standardized
patient care at the expense of more direct communication with
soldiers. Eaton deplored the arrogance of U.S. Sanitary
Commissioners whom she believed saw state benevolent groups as
competitors for supplies. Eaton struggled with the disruptions of
transience, scarcely sleeping in the same place twice, but found
the politics of daily toil even more challenging. Conflict between
Eaton and co-worker Isabella Fogg erupted almost immediately over
issues of propriety; the souring working conditions leading to
Fogg's ouster from Maine state relief efforts by late 1863. Though
Eaton praised some of the surgeons with whom she worked, she
labeled others charlatans whose neglect had deadly implications for
the rank and file. If she saw villainy, she also saw opportunities
to convert soldiers and developed an intense spiritual connection
with a private, which appears to have led to a postwar liaison.
Published here for the first time, the uncensored nursing diary is
a rarity among medical accounts of the war, showing Eaton to be an
astute observer of human nature and not as straight-laced as we
might have thought. This hardcover edition includes an extensive
introduction from the editor, transcriptions of relevant letters
and newspaper articles, and a thoroughly researched biographical
dictionary of the people mentioned in the diary.
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