Book Read Free

Louisa on the Front Lines

Page 21

by Samantha Seiple


  May, Samuel, 18–19, 20, 22

  McClellan, George

  Antietam and, 45, 46

  Burnside and, 73

  calls for return after failure at Fredericksburg, 104, 105

  firing of, 72, 73–74

  Lincoln and, 47

  on Twenty-Fourth Michigan Infantry, 95

  medical treatments, 109–110

  bleeding, 110

  blistering, 110, 138, 148

  for respiratory afflictions, 128

  “A Modern Cinderella” (Alcott), 24

  Moods (Alcott), 9, 25–26, 158, 165

  publication of, 173

  morphine, medical use of, 107

  “My Contraband” (Alcott), 162

  Nature (Emerson), 12

  New England Woman Suffrage Association, 194

  New Year’s, White House reception at, 130–132

  New York Times (newspaper), 108

  Nice (France), Louisa in, 181–182

  Nichols, Abram, 130

  Nightingale, Florence, 37, 39, 85

  Niles, Thomas

  Little Women and, 185–186, 187–188

  sequel to Little Women and, 189

  Nineteenth Amendment, 196

  Notes on Nursing (Nightingale), 37

  nurses, Union army, 2

  Dix and, 53–55

  free black, 135

  illness among Union Hotel Hospital, 133, 134

  pay for, 40

  recruitment of, 39

  requirements for, 39–40

  role of, 85–86

  US Sanitary Commission and, 38–39

  See also Alcott, Louisa May “Lu,” as army nurse

  nursing profession, beginnings of, 37–38

  Old Fashioned Girl (Alcott), 190

  133rd Pennsylvania Volunteers Regiment, Company D, 43

  opium, medical use of, 110

  Orchard House (Concord), 7, 8

  Christmas at, 166

  redecoration of, 157–158

  Paris, Louisa in Paris with “Laddie,” 182–183

  “Pauline’s Passion and Punishment” (Alcott), 113, 158

  Peabody, Elizabeth, 35

  Pension Victoria (Switzerland), Louisa at, 171, 174–181

  Perkins, Henry, 86

  Philbrick, Edward, 165

  The Pickwick Papers (Dickens), 112

  Polk, Andrew J., 175–177

  Polk, James, 176

  Polk, Rebecca, 175–176, 180

  Polk family, Louisa and, 174–177, 180

  Port Royal Experiment (South Carolina), Louisa’s desire to visit, 164–165

  Pratt, John, 50, 62–63

  Prescott, George, 31

  Prospect Hill (Virginia), 77

  quinine, as malaria treatment, 109–110

  racial equality, Alcott family’s belief in, 9

  racial tension and prejudice at Union Hotel Hospital, 102–103

  Rawl’s Mill, 52

  Redpath, James, 160–161, 163, 165, 185

  Revere, Paul, 61

  Richardson, James, 23–24

  Richmond (Virginia), Burnside’s campaign to recapture, 74–79

  Roberts Brothers (publishers), 160, 185. See also Niles, Thomas

  Ropes, Alice, 85

  caring for mother in hospital, 135

  discouraged from visiting her mother at hospital, 89

  letters from mother, 86, 128

  mother’s death and, 140–141

  Ropes, Hannah, 84–89

  abolitionism and, 85

  on battle at Fredericksburg, 104

  care of Confederate soldier, 96

  Christmas at the hospital and, 115–116, 118–120

  complaints about treatment of wounded and hospital conditions, 87–89

  death and funeral of, 139–131

  death of John Suhre and, 123–125

  discouraging daughter from visiting at hospital, 89

  on diseases at hospital, 91

  feeding patients, 100

  on healing process, 89–90

  ill with pneumonia, 128–129, 133

  ill with typhoid fever, 136, 138

  John Suhre and, 120–121

  literary career, 85

  Louisa’s affection for, 102

  on Louisa’s first day as nurse, 91

  sending Louisa home, 136–137

  Thanksgiving at hospital and, 114–115

  understanding of nurse’s role, 85–86

  Ropes, Ned, 85, 89, 128, 141

  Sanborn, Frank, 31, 32, 50, 51, 154

  The Scarlett Letter (Hawthorne), 52

  School of Philosophy, Bronson’s, 193, 195

  Schrock, Amos, 43, 120

  Schrock, Edward, 43, 120

  Schwalbach (Germany), 172, 174

  Second Battle of Bull Run, 44, 89

  Second Battle of Fredericksburg, 77–79

  blame for, 104–105

  wounded arriving at Union Hotel Hospital, 91–98

  Seward, William, 46

  Shakers, 17–18

  Sharpsburg (Maryland), 41, 44–45

  Shaw, Robert, 166

  Six Months in Kansas (Ropes), 85

  Sixth Massachusetts Volunteer Militia, 66

  “Slaughter Pen” (Prospect Hill, Virginia), 77

  Smith, Elizabeth, 115

  Snyder (hospital chaplain), 139

  Soldiers’ Aid Societies, 33, 166

  South Carolina, secession from Union, 1

  spiritualism

  Louisa’s recovery and, 152

  Mary Todd Lincoln and, 131–132

  Stamp Act, 61

  Stanton, Edwin, 46, 88

  “The Star Spangled Banner” (anthem), 30

  State House (Massachusetts), 61–62

  Stearns, Frank, 36–37

  Stevenson, Hannah

  Dix and, 53–55

  first army nurse volunteer from Massachusetts, 53

  on Hammond, 87

  Hannah Ropes and, 84

  letter to Alcotts informing them of Louisa’s illness, 143–144

  Louisa’s letter to revealing experience of washing men, 94

  as matron of Union Hotel Hospital, 54

  on nurses’ aching feet, 101

  Stipp, George

  calomel and, 90–91, 110, 136, 150, 189

  checking on Hannah Ropes, 128

  Success (Work) (Alcott), 165, 174, 185

  Suhre, Anna, 42

  Suhre, Emanuel, 42

  Suhre, George, 41, 121, 122

  Suhre, John, 41–47

  Battle of Marye’s Heights and, 77–79

  Burnside’s plan to recapture Richmond and, 74

  death of, 123–125

  early army experience, 43–44

  enlistment in Union army, 43, 121–122

  family life, 42–43

  injury of, 78–79

  letters home, 41–42, 47, 121, 122

  Little Women and, 187

  Louisa and, 112–113, 116–118, 120–122, 179

  Louisa’s writing about, 159–160

  in Sharpsburg (Maryland), 44–45, 46, 47

  visit from Edward Schrock, 120

  waiting for battle, 71, 77

  Suhre, Joseph, 42–43

  Suhre, Mike, 43, 76–77

  Suhre, Sarah, 42–43

  suicide, Louisa’s thoughts of, 34–35, 151

  Sumner, Charles, 139, 141

  Tablets (Bronson Alcott), 186, 189

  Taylor, J. H., 76

  Thanksgiving at Union Hotel Hospital, 114–115

  Thirty-Ninth Regiment of the Tenth Pennsylvania Reserves, Company A, 43

  Thoreau, Henry David, 11, 25, 30, 31, 114

  “Thoreau’s Flute” (Alcott), 114, 153

  publication of, 161–162

  Total Abstinence Society, 51

  La Tour de Peilz (Switzerland), Louisa in, 171, 174–181

  transcendentalism, 11–12

  travel etiquette for women, 64

  Treatise on the Practice of Medi
cine (Wood), 109

  tuberculosis, Weisneiwsky and, 178

  Tubman, Harriet, 10

  Twenty-Fourth Michigan Infantry (Iron Brigade), 95

  Twichell, Ginery, 60

  typhoid fever

  delirium and, 145, 147

  fever fits and, 147–148

  Hannah Ropes and, 136, 138

  Louisa and, 136–137, 141–153

  typhoid state, Louisa in, 141–142

  Underground Railroad, Alcott family and, 9–10

  Union Hotel Hospital (Georgetown), 67

  abuse of wounded soldiers, 86

  Alcott and, 55

  arrival of wounded from Fredericksburg, 91–98

  Christmastime at, 113, 114, 115–116, 118–120

  disrepair of, 82–83

  dissections of dead at, 108–109

  food offered at, 83–84, 86, 96, 100, 101–102

  Hannah Ropes and, 84–89

  Hannah Ropes’s funeral at, 139–141

  illness among nurses, 133, 134

  illnesses among nurses, 127–129

  Louisa’s arrival at, 69

  Louisa’s first day as nurse, 81–84

  overcrowding at, 105

  racial tension and prejudice at, 102–103

  Stevenson, 54

  Thanksgiving at, 114–115

  trying to keep wards clean at, 106

  use of ballroom at, 89

  US Sanitary Commission, 38–39, 99

  utopian society, Fruitlands, 16–18

  Walden Pond, 50–51

  Walden (Thoreau), 30

  Washington, George, 89

  Wasson, David Atwood, 158

  water cures, 21, 172

  Weisneiwsky, Ladislas “Laddie”

  as inspiration for “Laurie” in Little Women, 187

  Louisa’s thirty-third birthday and, 181

  Louisa’s visit with in Paris, 182–183

  meeting Louisa at Pension Victoria, 177–179

  nature of Louisa’s relationship with, 181, 183

  Weld, Anna, 171–175, 180–182

  Weld, William, 171

  White House, 67–68

  Blue Room, 131, 132

  East Room, 68

  New Year’s reception at, 130–132

  Whitman, Alf, 36

  Willis, Louisa, 27

  Winslow, John, 109–111, 127, 135, 136, 149

  women, travel etiquette for, 64

  Women’s Central Association for Relief, 38

  women’s rights, water cure and, 172

  women’s suffrage

  Alcotts and, 22

  Louisa’s support for, 193–197

  Wood, George, 109

  Wood, Robert, 54

  Work (Alcott), 165, 174, 185

  wounded soldiers

  abuse of, 86

  Confederate, 96

  from Fredericksburg, 91–98

  washing, 93–95

  wounds

  categorization of, 107

  dressing, 98, 99

  maggots in, 98–99

  writing career, Louisa’s

  during and after Civil War, 158, 159–164

  Atlantic Monthly and, 24, 34, 161–162

  beginning to write again after illness, 154

  choice of Redpath as publisher for Hospital Sketches, 160–161

  “Debby’s Debut,” 24

  early writings, 24

  Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper and, 35–36, 113, 158

  Hospital Sketches, 163–164, 166, 167

  “Hospital Sketches,” 158, 159–160, 161, 162

  “How I Went Out to Service,” 34

  The Inheritance, 25

  Little Women, 3, 185, 186–188

  “Love and Self-Love,” 24

  “A Modern Cinderella,” 24

  Moods, 9, 25–26, 158, 165, 173

  “My Contraband,” 162

  Old Fashioned Girl, 190

  “Pauline’s Passion and Punishment,” 113, 158

  publishing letters written home while army nurse, 154

  sequel to Little Women, 188–189, 190

  success of, 158–164, 165–166, 167, 188, 189, 190–191

  Success (Work), 165, 174, 185

  Thomas Niles and, 185–186, 187–188, 189

  “Thoreau’s Flute,” 114, 153, 161–162

 

 

 


‹ Prev