"Mother" Bickerdyke Mary Ann Bickerdyke endeared herself to
sick and wounded soldiers, and to their
commanders, by devoting herself to improving
their medical care during the war. After the war
she worked hard to secure pensions for Civil War
veterans.
Mary Ann Ball was born in Knox
County, Ohio, on July 19, 1817, but grew up in
the homes of various relatives. She attended
Oberlin College and later studied nursing. She
married Robert Bickerdyke in 1847. After his
death in 1859 she made her home in Galesburg,
Illinois, where she supported herself by
practicing "botanic medicine."
Upon outbreak of the Civil War,
Bickerdyke volunteered to accompany and
distribute a collection of supplies taken up for
the relief of wounded soldiers at a makeshift
army hospital in Cairo, Illinois. Finding the
conditions there to be extremely unsanitary, she
immediately set to work cleaning the facility;
she also did a lot of the cooking, in addition to
handling nursing duties. She then became matron
when a general hospital was organized there in
November 1861.
Following the fall of Fort
Donelson in February 1862, Bickerdyke made a
number of forays onto the battlefield to search
for wounded. Her alliance with the U.S. Sanitary
Commission began about this time.
Bickerdyke soon attached
herself to the staff of General Ulysses S. Grant, from whom she received a pass for free
transportation anywhere in his command. She
followed Grant's army down the Mississippi River,
setting up hospitals where they were needed. She
later accompanied General William
Tecumseh Sherman on his
march through Georgia. It was largely due to her
efforts that provisions were made for frequent
medical examinations and for transporting men who
could no longer walk. Under her supervision,
about 300 field hospitals were built with the
help of U.S. Sanitary Commission agents.
Bickerdyke endeared herself to
the sick and wounded soldiers, among whom she
became known as "Mother Bickerdyke."
But she was equally brutal towards incompetent
officers and physicians, many of whom she
succeeded in getting dismissed. Although she
frequently violated established procedures, she
had support from Generals Grant, Sherman, and
others who recognized the value of her services.
Following the war Bickerdyke
worked with the Chicago Home for the Friendless
(1866-1867). In 1867, in connection with a plan
to settle veterans on Kansas farmland, she opened
a boarding house in Salina, with backing from the
Kansas Pacific Railroad. The venture failed in
1869, and in 1870 she went to New York City to
work for the Protestant Board of City Missions.
Returning to Kansas in 1874, she helped provide
relief to victims of a locust plague. In 1876,
she moved to San Francisco, where she secured a
position at the U.S. Mint. She also devoted her
time and energy to the Salvation Army and other
organizations. In her "free time," she
worked on behalf of veterans, making frequent
trips to Washington to press pension claims; she
herself was granted a pension of $25 a month by
Congress in 1886. She returned to Kansas in 1887,
and died in Bunker Hill on November 8, 1901.
Ulysses S. Grant
William Tecumseh Sherman
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