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Clara Barton Biography

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It is 1868, and you are the wife of a soldier at war. You have suddenly stopped receiving letters from your husband. You panic after not hearing from him. After about a year, you get a call from your husband’s platoon leader personally saying that your husband has been identified as a national war hero, giving his life to save many. You can thank Clara Barton for getting your husband the respect that he deserves. By 1869, her obliging assistants and she had identified over 22,000 soldiers who were unaccounted for or deceased (Edison 17). Barton is the first teacher to open a school in New Jersey, one of the first women to be employed by the federal government, a nurse who went to the front line of the battlefield to deliver food and supplies, …show more content…

During a time when most teachers were men, she was a very reputable teacher, which was hard to do as a female, who taught her kids with fairness. Her students fascinated her and she declined to physically discipline them for any reason (Edison 9). In 1852, Barton Bordentown, New Jersey`s first public school. However, since she was a woman and could not run the school, she left the school after being replaced by a man in 1854 (Edison …show more content…

She was sent to be the first female worker in the United States Patent Office (“Founder Clara Barton”). Barton cared about people and wanted to do something for her country, so when she received the news about all of the wounded and sick soldiers in the civil war, she left her job and went to volunteer her medical services, tending to suffering soldiers (“Clara Barton”). Finally, in 1862, she received permission to transport supplies onto the battlefield. The soldiers and everyone else always gladly welcomed her (“Clara Barton (1821-1912)”). Clara Barton once stated “it has been long said that women don’t know anything about the war. I wish men didn’t either. They have always known a great deal too much about it for the good of their own kind (qt’d in “Clara Barton Biography”).” Working in the battlefield for all of those years has led her to believe that exact thing. In fact, from all of the work she did during the war, she earned the nickname: “The Angel of the Battlefield (“Clara Barton Biography”).” In July of 1863, Barton went as far as to move from her home in Hilton Head Island to Morris Island to take care of the growing amount of sick and injured soldiers in that area. Soon later is when her assistants and she identified over 22,000 soldier and she established The Bureau of Records of Missing Men of the Armies of the United States (“Clara

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