THE DESK USED BY CLARA BARTON
See page [47].
HISTORIC IN EDUCATION
Bordentown, N. J.
THE CLARA BARTON MUSEUM
The old school house reconstructed. See page [47].
Alone in the world, dependent upon her own efforts for a living and looking for a “job,” the following is what in letters Miss Barton says of herself in 1854 and 1860 respectively:
In a letter to her friend Miss Lydia F. Haskell, Washington, D. C., January 20, 1854, Clara Barton said:
“Well, I am a clerk in the United States Patent Office, writing my fingers stiff every day of my life.... The truth is, I have written nights until one or two o’clock for the last two weeks. I shall not be so very busy long. I am just now fitting the mechanical report for the press; that off my hands and I shall be quite at ease, I suppose.”
In a letter to Frank Clinton, Bordentown, New Jersey, dated January 2, 1860, Clara Barton said:
“I can teach English, French, drawing and painting.... I am a rapid writer or copyist, and have the reputation of being a very good accountant ... and if, in your travels through the South, you see an opening for me, tell me.”