62:
California and New
England. Parrish explains it selected nurses, provided hospital supplies, set up several hospitals, and outfitted several hospital ships. It also provided clothing and places to stay for freedmen and refugees, and set up schools for black children. It continued to finance various philanthropic projects until 1886.
61:
The
Western Sanitary Commission generally handled all sanitary affairs west of the Mississippi, and operated on a budget of $ 50,000 a month (about one-fourth the size of the rival national organization). The money came from private fundraising in the city of St. Louis, as well as from donors in
54:. In its first six weeks it established four large general hospitals with over two thousand beds. It later set up convalescent facilities. A major activity was acquiring adequate stocks of medicines and medical supplies for the hospitals run by the U.S. Army. Working with
138:
Rosecrans, W. S. "Annual Report of the
Western Sanitary Commission for the Years Ending July, 1862, and July, 1863"; "Circular of Mississippi Valley Sanitary Fair, to Be Held in St. Louis, May 17th, 1864"
184:
174:
169:
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76:
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151:
History of the United States
Sanitary Commission, Being the General Report of Its Work during the War of the Rebellion
51:
24:
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43:
28:
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it took charge of finding women to be civilian nurses and nurses' aides in Army facilities.
47:
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Bender, Robert
Patrick."'This Noble and Philanthropic Enterprise': The Mississippi Valley
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118:
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50:(1818–1901). Its first mission was to care for the wounded from the
31:
to help the U.S. Army deal with sick and wounded soldiers. It was led by
144:
38:
It was founded in St. Louis August 1861 under the protection of
General
23:
was a private agency based in St. Louis that was a rival of the larger
131:
Parrish, William E. "The
Western Sanitary Commission,"
121:
of 1864 and the
Practice of Civil War Philanthropy,"
16:
Private relief agency during the
American Civil War
143:Vol. 98, No. 203 (Apr., 1864), pp. 519–530
8:
88:
35:and focused on the needs of Freedmen.
135:March 1990, Vol. 36 Issue 1, pp 17–35
42:and under the leadership of Reverend
27:. It operated in the west during the
7:
185:Missouri in the American Civil War
72:Missouri in the American Civil War
14:
175:United States Sanitary Commission
77:United States Sanitary Commission
1:
170:American Civil War hospitals
125:95 (January 2001): 117–139
21:Western Sanitary Commission
201:
141:The North American Review,
123:Missouri Historical Review
52:Battle of Wilson's Creek
25:U.S. Sanitary Commission
44:William Greenleaf Eliot
46:(1811–1887) and
95:Rosecrans, pp 519-30
149:Stillé, Charles J.
133:Civil War History,
29:American Civil War
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48:James E. Yeatman
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112:Further reading
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40:John C. Frémont
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180:Hospital ships
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33:abolitionists
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56:Dorothea Dix
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164:Categories
153:(1866),
145:in JSTOR
66:See also
155:online
83:Notes
19:The
166::
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