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Civil War Nurses, Annie L.
Reeder and Arabella W. Barlow
Courtesy,
Penny Colman Collection
Click on image to enlarge.
Grave
of Annie L. Reeder (1825-1904)
A nurse at the Battle of Gettysburg, July 4, 1863
Bordentown Cemetery, Bordentown |
Click on image to enlarge.
Grave of Arabella Wharton Griffith Barlow
(1824-1864), Civil War Nurse.
Old Somerville Cemetery, Somerville
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During
the Civil War, women performed many roles. They worked in
factories and ran farms and businesses. Women were spies and at
least 300 women disguised themselves as men and served as
soldiers. Women were hospital directors, doctors and nurses. These
included Annie L. Reeder, whose grave is in Bordentown Cemetery,
Bordentown, New Jersey. According to the inscription on her
gravestone, she was a volunteer nurse at the Battle of Gettysburg,
July 4, 1863. (The fourth line on her gravestone reads: “VOL.
NURSE BAT OF GETTS”)
Arabella Barlow, a civil war nurse from
Somerville, contracted typhus and died in the service of her country on
July 27, 1864. In 1996, this marker was placed over the grave
of Arabella Wharton Griffith Barlow, in Old Somerville Cemetery, Somerville,
New Jersey. The inscription reads: “Born February 29,
1824 in Somerville, New Jersey.” Arabella Barlow served as a nurse during the Peninsula, Antietam
and Gettysburg campaigns. In 1861, she married General Francis
Barlow, whom she twice nursed back to life from grievous wounds. She nursed at
hospital sites at Fredericksburg, Port Royal, White House and City
Point “with no thought but for those who were suffering and
dying all around her . . . ”
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