Ned M Campbell

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An estimated 20,000 women worked in the hospitals of the Union armies during the war. They included not only those enrolled by the Army medical bureau under Dix’s superintendence, but thousands more employed by the Sanitary Commission or directly by regimental surgeons, plus thousands of others listed as cooks, laundresses, or “matrons,” all of whose duties overlapped with those of nurses.
A Day in September: The Battle of Antietam and the World It Left Behind
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