Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Clara Barton: A Life Of Compassion & Service

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Clara Barton: A Life Of Compassion & Service

    CLARA BARTON: A LIFE OF COMPASSION & SERVICE

    Biography
    March 5 2015

    To celebrate Women's History Month and Red Cross Month, we're taking
    a look at the inspiring life of Clara Barton, the founder of the
    American Red Cross, who made it her mission to serve humanity in
    troubled spots around the world.

    One of the world's greatest humanitarians was born on Christmas
    Day in 1821, in the town of North Oxford, Massachusetts. Clarissa
    "Clara" Harlowe Barton was the youngest of five children born to Sarah
    (Stone) and Captain Stephen Barton. A teacher, a nurse, a civil rights
    activist and a suffragist, this founder of the American Red Cross
    opened paths to the new field of volunteer service through the force
    of her personal example. She dedicated her life to helping people by
    "offering a hand up, not a handout."

    A Shy Student

    Homeschooled by her family, Barton, a bit of a tomboy, suffered from
    acute shyness as a child. She gained her first experience in nursing
    when she was 11 years old: Her brother David became seriously ill
    following an accident, and she cared for him for two years. She
    then went on to attend a private boarding school. Though she kept
    up academically, her reticence affected her health, and she returned
    home. With encouragement from her parents, she overcame her shyness
    and became a teacher. This pattern would repeat itself during her
    lifetime, as she suffered from periods of severe depression, yet
    always managed to rally when a crisis called for her services.

    Clara Barton - Mini Biography (TV-PG; 03:00) Clara Barton's many jobs
    included teaching, working at the U.S. Parent Office, and caring for
    soldiers during the Civil War. She is best remembered as the founder
    of the American Red Cross.

    A Gifted Teacher

    While still a teenager, Barton passed the teacher's exam and began
    instructing classes in May 1838 in North Oxford. She enthralled her
    students and refused to discipline them physically (even though that
    was common practice at the time). Six years later, she opened her
    own school.

    In 1850, Barton enrolled at New York's Clinton Liberal Institute to
    further her own education. After a year of study, she moved with a
    friend to Bordentown, New Jersey, where she enlisted support from
    the local community to open a free public school. By the end of the
    year, she had about 200 pupils. Her project was such a success that
    the community built a new school. However, she was shocked that they
    hired a man to run it--at twice her salary--so she resigned.

    The earliest known photograph of Clara Barton, which was probably
    taken in Clinton, New York in 1850 or 1851 while she was a student
    at the Clinton Liberal Institute. She was about 29 years old. (Photo:
    National Park Service)

    A Patent Clerk and a Civil War Nurse

    Barton's next move was to Washington, D.C. where she became the first
    female clerk at the U.S. Patent Office. But upon the outbreak of
    the Civil War, she independently organized relief for the wounded,
    often bringing her own supplies to front lines. She recognized the
    need for an efficient organization apart from the War Department's
    bureaucracy to distribute food and medical supplies to the troops. She
    began soliciting supplies from her friends, distributing them and
    staying to nurse and nourish the wounded, often very close to the
    actual fighting. In fact, while tending the wounded at the Battle of
    Antietam, she worked so close to the battlefield that a bullet once
    tore through her sleeve and killed the man she was treating.

    By June of 1864, the army had put her in charge of diet and nursing at
    X Corps. It was dubbed the "flying hospital" because of its frequent
    moves to be close enough to the battle to help the wounded, but not
    so close as to be overrun.

    An Advocate for the Wounded and the Missing

    On March 11, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln appointed Barton to
    search for missing prisoners of war. With assistance from several
    volunteers, including her sister Sally, Barton used her own money to
    set up Friends of the Missing Men of the United States Army. They
    put the name of every soldier for whom they received an inquiry
    on their lists, which were organized by state and published in
    local newspapers, displayed in post offices, and reviewed by various
    organizations. Veterans seeing the list could then provide Barton with
    information. She and her assistants received and answered more than
    63,000 letters and identified over 22,000 missing men. Years later,
    the Red Cross established a tracing service, which remains one of
    the organization's most valued activities today.

    Clara Barton photographed by Mathew Brady in 1865 from the Civil War
    period of her life. (Photo: National Archives/Wikiemedia Commons)

    A Suffrage Supporter

    In 1866, Barton went on a lecture tour throughout the Northeast and
    Midwest to describe her Civil War experiences. During this time,
    in November 1867, she met and befriended women's suffrage leaders
    Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. Although her own cause
    took precedence, Barton aligned herself with the suffrage movement
    and once hosted a party for 400 feminists. She also gave many lectures
    in support of suffrage.

    First President of the American Red Cross

    Ordered to Europe by her doctor for a rest cure in 1869, Barton met
    with the International Committee of the Red Cross. She participated
    in relief efforts during the Franco-Prussian War in 1870-1871, but
    was forced into temporary retirement by ill health in 1872. After
    recovering, she campaigned to establish an American branch of the
    Red Cross, despite government resistance due to fears of foreign
    entanglements. The U.S. Senate finally ratified the Geneva Convention
    in 1882 and formed the American Association of the Red Cross. Barton
    became its president.

    The newly formed organization sprang into action in the fall of 1881
    when forest fires ripped through Michigan. It provided relief during
    many other natural disasters and epidemics in the U.S., including
    the Johnstown, PA, flood in 1889. Clara directed many of the relief
    operations herself. The American Red Cross also provided international
    relief, including helping victims of the Russian famine of 1892 and
    providing relief to Armenians living in Turkish-controlled Armenia
    in 1896.

    Clara Barton working in the National Headquarters office of the
    American Red Cross in Glen Echo, Maryland in 1902. (Photo: National
    Park Service)

    In 1898, at age 76, Barton traveled with nurses to Cuba during the
    Spanish-American War to nurse the wounded and provide supplies and
    food. In 1900, after several contentious attempts, the U.S. Congress
    granted the American Red Cross a charter, making the independent,
    non-profit organization responsible for fulfilling the provisions of
    the Geneva Conventions, providing family and other support to the U.S.

    military, and providing a system for disaster relief. However, Barton's
    unwillingness to delegate responsibility had created dissent within the
    ranks of the Red Cross and, in 1904, she resigned from the organization
    she had founded and built.

    Rather than retire, in 1905, Barton established the National First Aid
    Association of America, which emphasized basic first aid instruction
    and emergency preparedness, and served as its honorary president for
    five years. She published several books about the beginnings of the
    American Red Cross and the global Red Cross network. She died on April
    12, 1912, at her home in Glen Echo, Maryland. She was 90 years old.

    Barton's family donated her papers and awards, along with numerous
    mementoes, to the Library of Congress. The National Park Service
    manages what is now the Clara Barton National Historic Site in Glen
    Echo. Barton's legacy to the nation--service to humanity--is reflected
    in the services provided daily by the employees and volunteers of
    the American Red Cross throughout the nation and in troubled spots
    around the world.

    http://www.biography.com/news/clara-barton-biography-facts

Working...
X