S Sears, W.H., [70] Second Manassas, [6], [23], [74] Sewall-Belmont House National Historic Site, [75] Shepard, Hannah, [44] Souvenir de Solferino, Un, [35], [36], [38], [39], [44] Spanish-American War, [33] Stanton, Edwin M., [72] Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, [10], [18] Stone, Elvira, [18], [20], [36]
T [Treaty of Geneva], [35]-46 passim, [60]. See also [International Red Cross] Tubman, Harriet, [9]
U U.S. Christian Commission, [27], [29] U.S. Sanitary Commission, [26], [27], [36], [57]
W Walker National Historic Site, Maggie L., [75] Welles, C.M., [25] Whitman, Walt, [27], [29] Wilhelm I, Kaiser, [37], [60] Williams, Sophia W.R., [57] Wilson, Henry, [21], [23], [30], [32], [42] Women’s rights, [7], [8], [32], [44], [62]; and Clara Barton, [18], [20], [43], [52]-53
Footnote
[1]From Clara Barton’s poem, “The Women Who Went to the Field.”
National Park Service
The National Park Service expresses its appreciation to all those who made the preparation and production of this handbook possible.
Text
Elizabeth Brown Pryor, who wrote [Part 2], is a professional historian. She is the author of several journal and magazine articles on nineteenth-century America and lives in Washington, D.C.