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Thanksgiving & the Civil War

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The celebration of Thanksgiving is an integral and unifying component of American culture. Thanksgiving Day, as we know it in 2014, did not become a national holiday until the Civil War. President Lincoln & Sarah J. Hale On November 29, 1860, the newly-elected Abraham Lincoln shared an unofficial Thanksgiving celebration with his […]


Updates on the Clara Barton Missing Soldiers Office Museum

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Hello everybody! There are exciting updates at the Clara Barton Missing Soldiers Office (CBMSO) Museum in Washington, DC. New Staff & Volunteers The CBMSO would like to welcome new staff members to the Museum. Emily Peikin transitioned from a summer internship at the National Museum of Civil War Medicine (NMCWM) to become […]


Frequently Asked Question: How did Barton get to D.C.?

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A question that has come up in our tours and amongst our staff as of late has been one of location, location, location: How did Clara Barton, a native of Massachusetts and a schoolteacher in New Jersey, become a U.S. Patent Office clerk in Washington D.C.? It seemed like a bit of […]


Clara Barton and Quicksilver

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The Mad Hatter by Lewis Carroll(Wikimedia Commons) Most of us are familiar with the often nonsensical, flamboyantly dressed Mad Hatter from Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland. Most of us are also, no doubt familiar with the expression “mad as a hatter.” Now this expression is not based upon Lewis’s tea drinking, top […]


Israel Libbey

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At the intersection of 7th and E, you’ll find a number of stores, museums, and restaurants. Just this intersection alone boasts a coffee shop, a museum, several restaurants, a liquor store, a frozen yogurt joint, and much more. The nature of the area hasn’t changed in the last 150 years, even if […]


A Common Question – Letters!

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A question that we always hear at the CBMSO is this: Where are the letters that all of these mothers, sisters, brothers, and friends of missing soldiers sent to Clara Barton? The answer is both simple and frustrating: everywhere! You can find them in museums, in the Library of Congress, in university […]


Dorence Atwater – Part 3

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Cover of A List of the Union Soldiers Buried at AndersonvilleAndersonville National Historic Site It is 1867. Dorence Atwater is entering the 22ndyear of his life, and he has already had enough hardship for an entire lifetime. He served in the 2ndNew York Cavalry as a scout during the American Civil War, […]


Dorence Atwater – Part 2

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I know I said this would be a two part blog post, but I’m finding so much to write about that it’ll have to be a three part one! This one will finish out the Civil War, Andersonville, and the Missing Soldiers Office, and the next one will complete the story with […]


Dorence Atwater – Part 1

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Dorence Atwater in 1865Property of the Connecticut State Library I just read a biography on the life of Dorence Atwater (From Andersonville to Tahiti: The Dorence Atwater Story by Thomas Lowry), one of Clara Barton’s friends and allies after the end of the Civil War, and it inspired me to do some […]


Artifact Series – Antimony Bottle

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Antimony Potassium Tartrate, aka Tartar EmeticProperty of U.S. General Services Administration This glass bottle of Antimony was found among Clara Barton’s possessions in the attic of the Missing Soldiers Office. What is Antimony, and why did Clara or one of the other tenants have a bottle of it? Antimony, also known as […]


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