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Clara Barton was honored
during her lifetime and is still honored
as one of the great women of America. She
was a true pioneer. She began teaching school
at a time when most teachers were men. She
won the right to have a desk job in an office
of the federal government in Washington.
Previously, women had been required to carry
their work home.
Her
greatest pioneering began when she was nearly 40 years old. Soon after
the outbreak of the Civil War, Miss Barton's eyes were opened to the
needs of people in distress and to the ones in which she and other
volunteers could help. This vision dominated the rest of Miss Barton's
long life. By the force of her personal example, she cleared the path
to new fields of volunteer service to people in trouble. An intense
devotion to the aim of serving others led her on to enough achievements
to fill several ordinary lifetimes.

Civil War Service
Miss Barton was working in Washington when the first units of federal
troops poured into the city in 1861. The war was young, the troops
newly recruited, the population alarmed and confused. Miss Barton saw
the need for immediate personal service to the men in uniform, for some
were wounded, some hungry, and some without bedding or any clothing
except what they had on their backs. She joined with other women who
gave service on behalf of such groups as the U.S. Sanitary Commission.
She collected some of the necessary articles herself, appealed for
more, and learned how to store and distribute them. Miss Barton paid
equal attention to the personal services that kept up the men's
spirits: she read to them, wrote letters for them, listened to their
personal problems, and prayed with them.
She
kept after leaders in both the government and the army until she was
given a pass to bring volunteer services to battlegrounds and field
hospitals. After the battle at Cedar Mountain, she appeared at a field
hospital at midnight with a four-mule-team load of supplies. Wrote the
surgeon, "I thought that night if heaven ever sent out a holy angel,
she must be the one, her assistance was so timely." Thereafter she was
known as "the Angel of the Battlefield."
At
Antietam, by ordering the driver of her supply wagon to "follow the
cannon," she brought needed food; dressings to the surgeons, who had
none left; and lanterns to light the work of the medical staff at
night. She herself nursed, comforted, and cooked food for the wounded.
She wrote, "The point I always tried to make was to succor the wounded
until medical aid and supplies could come up - I could run the risk; it
made no difference to anyone if I were shot or taken prisoner." At
Fredericksburg, she crossed the Rappahannock on a bridge shaken by
artillery fire to help a federal surgeon. A bursting shell tore her
clothing. On reaching the field hospital, she gave comfort and care to
the wounded and dying through the night and into the next day.
Her
interest in her "soldier boys" as individuals and the multitude of
services she performed for them gave her a great fund of information
about the men and the regiments to which they belonged. Toward the end
of the war, she was writing many letters to families who had inquired
about men reported missing. Again she had realized a need and had set
out to do something practical in response to it. President Lincoln
wrote the following note in the month before he was assassinated: "To
the Friends of Missing Persons: Miss Clara Barton has kindly offered to
search for the missing prisoners of war. Please address her at
Annapolis, giving her the name, regiment, and company of any missing
prisoner." The service thus set in motion anticipated one of the
worldwide operations of today's International Red Cross.
One
further achievement climaxed Miss Barton's Civil War activity. She
proposed that a national cemetery be created around the graves of the
men who died in Andersonville Prison and that the graves be marked
where names were known. She also proposed that the unknown be
memorialized. Here she anticipated the honor now symbolized by the Tomb
of the Unknown Soldier. After Miss Barton had helped to raise the flag
over the Andersonville grounds at their dedication in 1865, she wrote,
"I ought to be satisfied. I believe I am." Coming events were to show,
however, that she would never be satisfied except by responding again
and again to the call of human need. In the 1880s she would appeal to
veterans to support women's rights, asking them to stand by her as she
stood by them.

The International Red Cross
When Miss Barton sailed for Europe in 1869
in search of rest, she found there was a
still wider field for service. Friends in
Geneva, Switzerland, introduced her to the
Red Cross idea, and she read for the first
time the famous book A Memory of Soferino
by Henry Dunant, founder of the Red Cross
movement. That movement called for international
agreements for the protection of the sick
and wounded during wartime without respect
to nationality and for the formation of
voluntary national societies to give aid
on a neutral basis. The first treaty embodying
Dunant's idea had been drawn up in Geneva
in 1864. (This is called variously the Geneva
Treaty, the Red Cross Treaty, and the Geneva
Convention.) Later Miss Barton fought hard
and successfully for the signing of the
treaty by the United States.
A
more immediate call to action came to her with the outbreak of the
Franco-Prussian War in 1870. Though not yet allied to the Red Cross,
she knew the needs of war and went to the war zone with volunteers of
the International Red Cross. To protect herself with the
internationally accepted symbol, she used a red ribbon she was wearing
and made a cross to pin on her coat; it was characteristic that the
first Red Cross symbol she wore was one she made herself. She helped to
distribute relief supplies to the destitute in the conquered city of
Strasbourg and elsewhere in France. She also opened workrooms where the
inhabitants of the city could help themselves by making new clothes,
thus anticipating the production of great quantities of clothes and
comfort articles by the American Red Cross in later years.
Founding and Leading the American Red Cross
After her return to the United States, Miss Barton corresponded with
Red Cross officials in Switzerland. They looked on her as the natural
leader for carrying the Red Cross movement to this country and for
influencing the United States government to sign the Geneva Treaty. In
1877, the head of the International Committee of the Red Cross sent her
a letter addressed to the President of the United States, asking her to
present it. Although she presented the letter, the administration of
President Hayes looked on the Geneva Treaty as a possible "entangling
alliance." She was determined and kept up her efforts until President
Arthur signed and the Senate ratified the treaty in 1882.
In
1881, Miss Barton and a group of supporters formed the American
Association of the Red Cross as a District of Columbia corporation.
Reincorporated as the American National Red Cross in 1893, the
organization was given charters by Congress in 1900 and in 1905. The
1905 charter and its amendments provide a basis for today's American
Red Cross and nurture close working relations between the federal
government and the American Red Cross.
The
American Red Cross, with Miss Barton at its head, devoted itself
largely to disaster relief for the first 20 years of its existence. The
Red Cross flag was flown officially for the first time in this country
in 1881 when Miss Barton was appealing for funds and clothing in
Dansville, New York, to aid victims of forest fires in Michigan. In
1884, she chartered steamers to take supplies down the Ohio and
Mississippi to help flooded families. In 1889, she helped to relieve
Johnstown, Pennsylvania, after its great flood. In 1892, she organized
assistance for Russians suffering from famine, and in 1896, she
directed disaster relief operations in Turkey and Armenia.
Miss
Barton introduced the idea of Red Cross disaster relief to many other
national societies, and many foreign countries honored her with
decorations. She was one of three United States delegates to the Third
International Red Cross Conference in Geneva in 1884; she was the only
woman delegate present. Her personality and prestige influenced the
proceedings of other International Red Cross Conferences, such as the
Sixth, in Vienna (1897), and the Seventh, in St. Petersburg (1902).
The
most significant act of Miss Barton during her closing years as head of
the American Red Cross was to take Red Cross supplies and services to
Cuba during the Spanish-American War. Aid was given to the American
forces, to prisoners of war, and to Cuban refugees. This effort was the
first step toward the broad programs of service to the armed forces and
to civilians during wartime that have become traditional in the
American Red Cross. On resigning as president of the organization in
1904, Miss Barton left a foundation of service to humanity for others
to build on.

A Life of Contrasts
Miss Barton, born in North Oxford, Massachusetts, lived from Christmas
Day 1821 to April 12, 1912. She spent her last days at her home in Glen
Echo, Maryland.
In
addition to leading the Red Cross, Miss Barton interested herself in
other fields - education, prison reform, women's suffrage, and even
spiritualism. Her force and independent spirit created opponents, but
her charm attracted many loyal followers. Periods of illness struck
from time to time throughout her life, strangely departing when a
calamity threatened somewhere. She rose early and worked late into the
night. As a child, she kept up with her brothers, riding and taking
part in their games despite her small frame. She was said to be
somewhat vain about her appearance, particularly her hair, although she
did not consider herself a pretty woman. She liked dashes of bold color
on her clothing, especially red. "It's my color," she once said.
Miss
Barton had a talent for words. She was ready to spell three-syllable
words when she started school at the age of four, and throughout her
later life she wrote voluminously, often daily. She had great skills as
a speaker. Veterans attending her lectures were often moved to tears as
she vividly described battlefield conditions. She also had great
charisma and could quickly rally volunteers to meet most crises
threatening the country. By her actions she spelled out the meaning of
mercy; by her words she impressed her cause and her personality upon
her country and upon the world.
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