The Library of Congress > American Memory
banner image
return to home page table of contents about the guide abbreviations search banner image

Manuscript Division

INTRODUCTION

USING THE COLLECTIONS

SELECTED COLLECTIONS
Women's Suffrage
Reform
Education
Health and Medicine
Blackwell Sisters
Civil War
arrow graphicRed Cross and World War I
Public Health Nurses
Reproductive Health
Male Doctors and Others
Mental Health
Science
Papers of Presidents and First Ladies
Congressional Collections
Legal Collections
Military and Diplomatic Affairs
Literature and Journalism
Artists, Architects, and Designers
Actresses and Actors

CONCLUSION

MANUSCRIPT EXTERNAL SITES

VISIT/CONTACT

Health and Medicine: Red Cross and World War I
see caption below

Watercolor drawing in souvenir autograph album. E. Carra[nce]. Mary Curry Desha Breckinridge file, Breckinridge Family Papers (container 845). Manuscript Division. LC-MS-13698-4.

full caption
| bibliographic record

During Clara Barton's last years with the American National Red Cross, the organization was criticized for its inefficiency and came under rebuke during the Spanish-American War from Surgeon General George M. Sternberg, who believed that women nurses should not be permitted on the battlefield but instead should be confined to base hospitals. Sternberg appointed physician and anthropologist Anita Newcomb McGee (1864-1940) [catalog record] as acting assistant surgeon general and charged her with recruiting qualified graduate nurses to staff army hospitals and later to serve in overseas camps. At the end of the war, McGee helped organize a permanent Army Nurses Corps. Her papers (3,000 items; 1688-1932) document her medical and army careers as well as her role in forming the Women's Anthropological Society of America and her research on communal societies in the United States, including the Shakers and the Oneida community.

The discord within the American National Red Cross was fueled in part by a power struggle between Clara Barton and newly appointed executive committee member Mabel Thorp Boardman (1860-1946) [catalog record], who eventually succeeded Barton as the organization's leader in 1904. Boardman's papers (4,000 items; 1853-1945; bulk 1904-29), which include extensive correspondence with William Howard Taft and other national officials, trace the Red Cross's growing ties to the federal government and its emergence as the leading voluntary organization providing disaster and war relief and promoting public health and safety.

During the First World War, more than eighteen thousand Red Cross nurses served with the Army and Navy Nurse Corps. Some of these nurses—such as Dorothy Kitchen O'Neill (69 items; 1918-19) [catalog record], who was stationed at American Red Cross headquarters in Savenay, France—worked at American base hospitals, at field units, and aboard ships, whereas others, including Helen Culver Kerr (200 items; 1918-19) [catalog record], served at home combating the 1918 influenza epidemic and providing medical services to military camps, munitions plants, and shipyards.

Some American Red Cross nurses served as part of the British Expeditionary Force (B.E.F.). Edith Hulsizer Copher (1891-1935), for example, went to France as a dietitian with a B.E.F. Red Cross unit formed by Dr. Harvey Cushing of the Harvard Medical School, and her letters in the Hulsizer Family Papers (145 items; 1915-41; bulk 1917-19) [catalog record] provide not only an account of the medical conditions in army facilities but a glimpse of the social life and everyday concerns of the young hospital staff.

The long hours, stress, and exposure to disease took a toll on army medical personnel. Obituaries in the Breckinridge Family Papers (205,000 items; 1752-1965) [catalog record] suggest that fatigue and overwork contributed to the death of Mary Curry Desha Breckinridge (d. 1918), a Red Cross nurse who joined a Chicago hospital unit serving in France during the war. Several hundred letters written to and from Breckinridge describe her experiences.

At the start of World War I, Red Cross official Grace Elizabeth Allen (1886-1976) was just entering nursing school in Washington, D.C. Several volumes of her meticulous diary in the Allen Family Papers (500 items; 1865-1976) [catalog record] discuss her training and wartime work at Columbia Hospital in the nation's capital.

[Top]
red line
Home Table of Contents About the Guide Abbreviations Search
The Library of Congress> > American Memory