Wound Dresser
Civil War Carnage
In December 1862 Whitman saw the name of his brother George (1892-1901),
a member of the 51st New York Infantry, listed among the wounded
at Fredericksburg. Whitman rushed from Brooklyn to the Washington
area to search the hospitals and encampments for George. This was
his indoctrination to the ghastly consequences of warfare. He began
to make acquaintance of the soldiers and note accounts of those
who had served in battle. George had fought earlier at Antietam,
where in September 1862 more than 23,000 men were killed, wounded,
or missing in action in the bloodiest battle of the Civil War.
Walt Whitman (1819-1892)
Hospital notebook "At Antietam"
Manuscript Division (24A)
Partial Transcription
Finding George
Whitman was pickpocketed on his journey to Washington, and arrived "without
a dime." With the help of friends, he secured a pass behind military
lines. On December 29, 1862, a relieved Whitman wrote to his mother
that he had "found George alive and well" in a camp at Falmouth,
across the river from Fredricksburg, Virginia. He also reported
that he had decided to stay in the area and find work. He soon
accompanied wounded soldiers back to Washington. Whitman and his "dear,
dear, mother" were extremely close. He wrote to her and other family
members throughout the war.
Whitman in Washington
Whitman was forty-three years old in 1862-1863, when he began
volunteering in Washington, D.C., war hospitals. He had several
portraits taken in the 1860s at the studios of Mathew Brady and
Alexander Gardner. The latter had made his name as a photographer
with his documentation of the dead at Antietam. Whitman became
an unpaid "delegate" of the Christian Commission in early 1863
and was authorized to visit the sick and wounded in hospitals and
camps to comfort and cheer them and provide for their needs. He
found he had an "instinct and faculty" for easing suffering.
Mathew Brady (1822-1896), photographer
Walt Whitman
Carte de visite, ca. 1862
Digital ID# ppmsca-08541
Prints & Photographs Division (21)
Dear Comrade
Whitman developed close personal relationships with many of the
men he tended to in army hospitals. He visited the wards regularly,
referring to the soldiers as his "dear comrades." He wrote letters
home for those too ill or physically disabled to write. He kept
watch over the dying. When he went away to visit family in Brooklyn,
he wrote back to the young men about his adventures. He was to
them father, mentor, brother, comforter, and friend. Among those
with whom he grew close and kept in touch after discharge was Bethuel "Thuey" Smith,
a handsome farm boy from eastern New York state.
Armory Square Hospital
Whitman visited one or more of the many army hospitals daily: "Am
much in Patent Office, Eighth street, H street, Armory Square and
others," he recorded. He raised money to be able to bring needed
provisions to the men and carried a haversack filled with food
and supplies--crackers, peaches, preserves, tea, oysters, tobacco,
brandy, stamps, envelopes and note paper, fresh underwear and handkerchiefs,
socks, and the morning papers. Whitman went frequently to the wards
of Armory Square Hospital, where the most severely wounded were
treated.
Ward K, Armory Square Hospital,
Washington, D.C. [August 1865]
(located on the site of the present-day National Air and Space Museum)
Copyprint
Digital ID# ppmsca-08543
Prints & Photographs Division (28)
|