Blog
Learn about the impact of Alexander Gardner’s photographs taken of dead soldiers at Antietam.
“The ward is silent again
As our lady resumes her place…”
How a change in Pension law cut off hundreds of widows, and how they fought back.
From a Confederate wartime hospital, to our nation’s first hospital exclusively for mentally ill African Americans, discover the story of Central State.
By the of the 19th century, United States’ pension administration was huge: occupying an imposing building, overseeing the distribution of $138 million in pensions to nearly a million Union veterans and surviving relatives.
One of the only African American woman memoirists from the Civil War, Taylor chronicles her role as a laundress, cook, and nurse for the 33rd USCT.
Born a slave, Harriet Jacobs became an unstoppable truth teller, activist, and reformer.
Dr. Mary E. Walker of New York embarked on a crusade to become a surgeon in the Union Army.
Largely forgotten today, Cornelia Hancock was one of the best known and beloved nurses of the Army of the Potomac during the Civil War. Throughout the war, from the Battle of Gettysburg to Appomattox, she maintained a long association with the 14th Connecticut Volunteers through her work in 2nd and 3rd Corps […]
Meet Kate Warne
