Women Civil War Overview.Pdf

Women Civil War Overview.Pdf

U.S. Army Military History Institute Women-Civil War 950 Soldiers Drive Carlisle Barracks, PA 17013-5021 31 Mar 2012 WOMEN & THE CIVIL WAR A Working Bibliography of MHI Sources CONTENTS General Sources.....p.1 Northern -General Histories…..p.4 -Specific Individuals…..p.5 Southern -General Histories…..p.8 -Specific Individuals…..p.11 GENERAL SOURCES Bell, Christine A. ”A Family Conflict: Visual Imagery of the ‘Homefront’ and the War Between the States, 1860-1866.” 2 vols. PhD dss, Northwestern 1996. N6510.B45. Blanton, DeAnne, & Cook, Lauren M. They Fought Like Demons: Women Soldiers in the American Civil War. Baton Rouge: LSU, 2002. 277 p. E628.B53. Bristow, Joseph Q., editor. Washington Diary: Characters and Events of the War between the States as Recalled in the Memoirs of an Unknown Young Lady (1873-1882). NY: Exposition Press, 1954. 89 p. E601.B75. Brockett, Linus P. The Camp, the Battle Field and the Hospital: Or, Lights and Shadows of the Great Rebellion. Phila: Nat Pub, 1866. 512 p. E655.B86. _____. & Vaughn, Mary C. Woman’s Work in the Civil War: A Record of Heroism, Patriotism, and Patience. 2 vols. Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1993. E467.B862. Originally published in 1867. Clinton, Catherine. The Other Civil War: American Women in the Nineteenth Century. NY: Hill & Wang, 1984. 242 p. HQ1410.C55. Women-Civil War p. 2 _____, & Silber, Nina, editors. Divided Houses: Gender and the Civil War. NY: Oxford, 1992. 418 p. E468.9.D58. 18 essays on gender issues. Conklin, Eileen. The Journal of Women’s Civil War History: from the Home Front to the Front Lines: Accounts of the Sacrifice, Achievement, and Service of American Women, 1861-1865. Gettysburg, PA: Thomas Pubs, 2000. E628.J68. Conklin, Eileen F. Women at Gettysburg, 1863. Gettysburg, PA: Thomas, 1993. 430 p. E475.53.C66. Cuccia, Lenora. “They Weren’t All Like Lorena: Musical Portraits of Women in the Civil War.” In Bugle Resounding: Music and Musicians of the Civil War Era. Columbia, MO: U MO, 2004. pp. 54-70. E647.N38. Culpepper, Marilyn M. Trials and Triumphs: Women of the American Civil War. East Lansing, MI: MI State, 1991. 427 p. E628.C85. Cutter, Barbara A. “Devils in Disguise, Angels on the Battlefield: Piety and Fiendishness in American Womanhood, 1800-1865.” PhD dss, Rutgers, 1999. 339 p. HQ1122.C88. Dannett, Sylvia G. Our Women of the Sixties. Wash, DC: US Civil War Cent Commission, 1963. 44 p. E628.D22. Eggleston, Larry G. Women in the Civil War: Extraordinary Stories of Soldiers, Spies, Nurses, Doctors, Crusaders, and Others. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2003. 214 p. E628.E38. Forbes, Ella. African American Women During the Civil War. NY: Garland, 1998. 272 p. E540.N3.F67. Frank, Lisa T., editor. Women in the American Civil War. 2 vols. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2008. E628.W655. Funkhouser, Darlene. Women of the Civil War. Wever, LA: Quixote Press, 2004. 170 p. E628.F86. Hall, Richard. Patriots in Disguise: Women Warriors of the Civil War. NY: Paragon House, 1993. 224 p. E628.H35. _____. Women on the Civil War Battlefront. Lawrence, KS: U KS, 2006. 397 p. E628.H352. Harper, Judith E. Women During the Civil War: An Encyclopedia. NY: Routledge, 2004. 472 p. E628.H36. Jolly, Ellen R. Nuns of the Battlefield. Providence,RI: Providence Visitor Press, 1927. 336 p. E621.J75. Chronicles the wartime work of of various orders. Women-Civil War p.3 King, Wendy A. Clad in Uniform: Women Soldiers of the Civil War. Collinswood, NJ: CW Historicals, 1992. 25 p. E628.K56. Larson, C. Kay. “Bonny Yank and Ginny Reb.” Minerva (Spring 1990): pp. 33-48. Per. _____. “Bonny Yank and Ginny Reb Revisited.” Minerva (Summer 1992): pp. 35-61. Per. Larson, Rebecca D. Blue and Gray: Roses of Intrigue. Gettysburg, PA: Thomas, 1993. 72 p. E608.L37. Biographical sketches of females involved in “information trade” Leonard, Elizabeth D. All the Daring of the Soldier: Women of the Civil War Armies. NY: Norton, 1999. 368 p. E628.L459. Massey, Mary Elizabeth. Women in the Civil War. Lincoln, NE: U NE, 1994. 371 p. E628.M37. Originally published as Bonnet Brigades (1966). E628.M3. McSherry, Frank., Jr., et. al., editors. Civil War Women: American Women Shaped by Conflict in Stories by Alcott, Chopin, Welty and Others. Little Rock, AR: August House, 1988. 175 p. PS648.C54.C54. Moore, Frank. Women of the War: Their Heroism and Self-Sacrifice. Hartford, CT: Scranton, 1867. 596 p. E628.M6. Vignettes. Nulton, Karen S. "The Social Civil War." PhD dss, Rutgers, 1992. 196 p. E468.9.N84. Schultz, Jane E. “Women at the Front: Gender and Genre in Literature of the American Civil War.” MA thesis, U MI, 1988. 382 p. E628.S38. _____. Women at the Front: Hospital Workers in Civil War America. Chapel Hill, NC: U NC, 2004. 360 p. E621.S35. Silber, Nina. "'A Woman's War': Gender and Civil War Studies." OAH Magazine of History (Fall 1993): pp. 11-13. Per. Silvey, Anita. I’ll Pass for Your Comrade: Women Soldiers in the Civil War. NY: Clarion Books, 2008. 115 p. E628.S555. Stinson, Byron T. "Civil War Pin-Up Girls." Civil War Times Illustrated (Aug 1969): pp. 38-41. Per. Tsui, Bonnie. She Went to the Field: Women Soldiers of the Civil War. Guilford, CT: TwoDot, 2006. 149 p. E628.T78. Whites, LeeAnn, & Long, Alicia P., editors. Occupied Women: Gender, Military Occupation, and the American Civil War. Baton Rouge: LSU, 2009. 256 p., map. E628.O33. Women-Civil War p.4 Wright, Cathryn E. “The Home to the Army: Union Soldiers, Gender and the Response to Suffering During the U.S. Civil War.” PhD dss, U WI-Madison, 2000. 525 p. E621.W75. See also: -Bibliography on Vivandieres in Women-Civil War. NORTHERN WOMEN-General Histories Abramowitz, Benjamin L. “Anna Ella Carroll: Invisible Member of Lincoln’s Cabinet.” Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the Military (Winter 1990): pp. 30-43. Per. Attie, Jeanie. Patriotic Toil: Northern Women and the American Civil War. Ithaca, NY: Cornell, 1998. 294 p. E628.A87. Bauer, Cricket. “Hardtack & Hairnets: Women in Photographs of the Union Army.” Military Images Magazine (May/Jun 2000): pp. 12-19. Per. Benton, Josiah H., Jr. What Women Did for the War: And What the War Did for the Women. Address, Soldier's Club, Wellesly, MA, 30 May 1894. 25 p. E628.B4. Dannett, Sylvia G.L., editor. Noble Women of the North. NY: Yoseloff, 1959. 419 p. E628.N63. Giesberg, Judith. “’Noble Union Girls.’” Civil War Times (Jun 2010): pp. 58-64. Per. Women workers in munitions industries. Hurn, Ethel A. Wisconsin Women in the War Between the States. Madison, WI: WI Hist Comm, 1911. 190 p. E537.H87. Keegan, Jami A. “Scandal of Patriotism: The Forgotten Contributions of Michigan’s Native Americans, Women and African-Americans During the Civil War.” MA thesis, Eastern MI, 2000. 100 p. D514.K44. Ladies Aid, Philadelphia. An Appeal for Sick Soldiers: Report of the Ladies' Aid Society of Philadelphia. Phila: Sherman, 1861. E173.P18no218pam1. Leonard, Elizabeth D. Yankee Women: Gender Battles in the Civil War. NY: Norton, 1994. 308 p. E628.L46. Military Order, Loyal Legion of US, New York Commandery. Project for a National Monument to the Women of the Civil War. NY: Commandery, 1911. 15 p. E628.M55. Women-Civil War p.5 Ross, Kristie R. “’Women are Needed Here’: Northern Protestant Women as Nurses during the Civil War, 1861-1865.” PhD dss, Columbia, 1993. 254 p. E621R67. Seidman, Rachel F. “Beyond Sacrifice: Women and Politics on the Pennsylvania Homefront during the Civil War.” PhD dss, Yale, 1995. 245 p. E628.S45. _____. “A Monstrous Doctrine?: Northern Women on Dependency During the Civil War.” In An Uncommon Time: The Civil War and the Northern Home Front. NY: Fordham, 2002. pp. 170-88. E468.9.U53. _____. “’We Were Enlisted for the War’: Ladies’ Aid Societies and the Politics of Women’s Work during the Civil War.” In Making and Remaking Pennsylvania’s Civil War. University Park, PA: PSU, 2001. pp. 59-79. E527.M32. Silber, Nina. “A Compound of Wonderful Potency: Women Teachers of the North in the Civil War South.” In The War was You and Me: Civilians in the American Civil War. Princeton, NJ: Princeton, 2002. pp. 35-59. E468.W28. _____. “Loosening the Ties That Bind: The Conflicting Moral Visions of Men and Women in the Civil War North.” North & South (Mar 2006): pp. 24-33. Per. Sizer, Lyde D. “’A Revolution in Woman Herself’: Northern Women Writers and the American Civil War, 1850-1872.” PhD dss, Brown, 1994. 412 p. PS217.C58.S59. Sudlow, Lynda L. A Vast Army of Women: Maine’s Uncounted Forces in the American Civil War. Gettysburg, PA: Thomas, 2000. 263 p. E511.S83. NORTHERN WOMEN-Specific Individuals Alleman, Tillie Pierce. At Gettysburg: Or, What a Girl Saw and Heard of the Battle. Ann Arbor, MI: University Microfilms, 1971 reprint of 1889 edition. E475.53.A42. American Missionary Association. Woman's Work for the Lowly as Illustrated in the Work of the American Missionary Association among the Freedmen. Boston: South Boston Inquirer, 1874. 16 p. E185.2.A44. Ames, Mary Clemmer. From a New England Woman's Diary in Dixie in 1865. Springfield, MA: Plimpton, 1906. E185.93.S7.A5. _____. Ten Years in Washington: Life and Scenes in the National Capital as a Woman Sees Them. Hartford, CT: Worthington, 1874. F198.A512. Anderson, Galusha. The Story of Aunt Lizzie Aiken. Chicago: Sprague, 1880. E628.A52. Women-Civil War p.6 Austin, Anne L. The Woolsey Sisters of New York: A Family's Involvement in the Civil War and a New Profession (1860-1900).

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