Join us on Saturday, June 3 @ 2:00 PM for our very first Clara Barton’s Civil War Washington Walking Tour
On Saturday, June 3, @ 2:00 PM the Clara Barton Missing Soldiers Office Museum will be offering its very own walking tour in Downtown Washington D.C. Join us as we take a walk to various locations with a connection to one of America’s greatest humanitarians. Destinations for the tour include the former Patent Office, now the National Portrait Gallery, Ford’s Theatre and Petersen House, and Mathew Brady’s photography studio.
Walking Tour Tickets are $15 each and FREE for NMCWM members. Tickets for the walking tour also include admission to the exhibits at the Clara Barton Missing Soldiers Office Museum.
Tickets can be purchased by clicking the link here.
The Clara Barton Missing Soldiers Office Museum is located at 437 7th Street NW, Washington D.C.
HOURS:
The Clara Barton Missing Soldiers Office Museum is open on Fridays and Saturdays from 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM for walk-ins. All other times, the Museum will be open only to groups of 10+. Click here to reserve a group tour.
Opens at 11:00 AM
Last Admission at 4:30 PM
PHONE:
(202) 824-0613
LOCATION:
437 7th Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20004
Looking for our Mailing Address?
The preserved rooms are accessible by both stairs and elevator.
Admission rates apply.
[She] toiled as few men could have done, stanching wounds which might otherwise have proved fatal, administering cordials to the fainting soldier, cheering those destined to undergo amputation, moistening lips parched with thirst [and closing the eyes of the dead].
The patriot blood of my father was warm in my veins.
I may sometimes be willing to teach for nothing, but if paid at all, I shall never do a man’s work for less than a man’s pay.
I don’t know how long it has been since my ear has been free from the roll of a drum. It is the music I sleep by and I love it.
I ask neither pay or praise, simply a soldier’s fare and the sanction of your Excellency to go and do with my might, whatever my hands can find to do.
Though it is little that one woman can do, still I crave the privilege of doing it.
I only wish I could work to some purpose. I have no right to these easy comfortable days and our poor men suffering and dying thirsting … My lot is too easy and I am sorry for it.
It was a miserable night. There was a sense of impending doom. We knew, everyone knew, that two great armies of 80,000 men were lying there face to face, only waiting for dawn to begin the battle.
When I reached [home], and looked in the mirror, my face was still the color of gunpowder, a deep blue. Oh yes, I went to the front!