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Woman's Relief Corps

The Woman's Relief Corps (WRC) is a charitable organization in the United States, originally founded as the official women's auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) in 1883.[1] The organization was designed to assist the GAR and provide post-war relief to Union veterans.[2] The GAR had been created as a "fraternal" organization and refused to allow women to join up until the creation of this auxiliary.[2] It is largely dedicated to historical preservation of research and official documentation related to the WRC and GAR.[1]

E. F. Barker, 1st National President
K. B. Sherwood, 2nd Natl. Pres.
S. E. Fuller, 3rd Natl. Pres.
E. D. Kinne, 4th Natl. Pres.
E. S. Hampton, 5th Natl. Pres.
C. R. Craig, 6th Natl. Pres.
A. T. Wittenmyer, 7th Natl. Pres.
M. S. McHenry, 8th Natl. Pres.
S. A. Sanders, 9th Natl. Pres.
M. R. Wickens, 10th Natl. Pres.

Background edit

The WRC expresses that among other tenets, a primary purpose is to perpetuate the memory of the Grand Army of the Republic, a veterans' advocacy organization for Union Army soldiers during the American Civil War. The WRC is the GAR's only legally recognized auxiliary and was organized at the specific request of the GAR. A formal Charter was drawn on July 25 and 26, 1883 in Denver, Colorado. It was subsequently incorporated by Public Act of the 87th Congress on September 7, 1962.[3] The first elected National President of the organization was E. Florence Barker.[4][5]

Creation edit

As a result of women's roles in the war effort, they became equipped with the leadership and organizational skills that positioned them well for philanthropic organizations. They mobilized to provide aid to veterans and their families following the war. The creation of these local charities paved the basis for the origin of the WRC. From 1879, the primary criterion for eligibility to become a member of the WRC was loyalty to the Union cause, and membership was not necessarily restricted to residents of Union States.[2]

The first chapter of the WRC began in Portland, Maine 10 years prior to the more notable one in Massachusetts. In 1879, a group of Massachusetts women from different associations started a "secret" organization that sought to more effectively unify the various local and state relief programs that had been loyal to the North during the American Civil War. In 1890, a chapter of the WRC was introduced in New Hampshire and it, along with the Massachusetts post, formed the Union Board of New England.[2]

Black Chapters edit

While most organizations prevented African Americans from joining, the WRC had numerous all black chapters in many urban cities across the country and various southern states also had detached black corps. Although the south kept their chapters segregated, the majority of the corps in the north were desegregated.[2]

One notable African-American WRC member was Susie Taylor, who helped organize Corps 67 in Boston, Massachusetts in 1886, and over the next twelve years served as its secretary, treasurer, and president. [citation needed] Two other black women, Anna Hughes and Marilla Bradbury also held officer positions in the Martin Delaney Corps.[2]

Julia Mason Layton, a black WRC member, fought for the 1893 National Convention decision that allocated funds to African American southern members so that they could be trained to more efficiently organize and finance black veterans. She also helped to create the first all-black chapter in the Department of Potomac.[6]

In Massachusetts, African American woman R. Adelaide Washington was elected as the president of the St. John Chambre Corps. Her election was incredibly impressive considering, at the time, this chapter was dominated by white members.[7]

Rules edit

Being the official auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic, the WRC could not just operate as it wished or do whatever it pleased. The founding members of the WRC had to write rules and regulations that the GAR would approve of and also ran along similar lines of what the GAR was doing. The Rules and Regulations for the Government of the Woman's Relief Corps stipulated three main objectives. The third of these objectives was to "maintain true allegiance to the United States of America" and teach patriotism and "love of country."[8]

State/Territory departments and post edit

The numbers of state and territory departments and posts changed regularly from year to year. In 1892, the WRC was made up of 45 departments, provisional departments, and detached corps of various territories and states. There was a combined total of 2,797 corps (chapters) across the country. In 1892, the WRC also had 98,209 members.[9] Arizona, Florida, Georgia (U.S. state), Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, New Mexico, New York (state), North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Washington, D.C. all also had WRC posts, detached and attached, by 1916.[2]

As desegregation of the state departments continued, members at the national level, such as president Abbie Addams, wanted to halt black corps from being created. She proposed this idea on the basis that black women were not educated enough nor interested in joining such an organization. She also wanted to investigate black chapters and dissolve them if they did not have proper permits or licenses to hold group meetings.[7]

Interdependence of the GAR and WRC edit

The WRC began as an auxiliary to the GAR, but as the GAR began to decline, the WRC was able to help promote the longevity of the republic. Because the GAR required members to be veterans of the Union, their numbers began to dwindle as generations passed. In New Jersey, the Ladies Loyal League was an auxiliary that was created by women who had evidence that they were related to Union veterans. This group never reached the same level of importance nor power of the WRC whose members were abundant and reputable. In the 20th century, the WRC gained a political foothold as it lobbied for feminist policies and pensions for Union nurses, as well as patriotic education.[7]

Memorial Day edit

Early on in the creation of the WRC, Memorial Day was used to teach patriotism and nationalism to children of all ages across the North (there was an effort in the South, but there was a great deal of resistance). The members of the Woman's Relief Corps with the assistance of children would make floral wreaths and place them alongside American Flags at the graves of Union veterans and nurses who died during and since the Civil War.[10]

The members of the GAR and WRC viewed Memorial Day as a holy day, but by 1915, the organizations were combating the view that Memorial Day was now a holiday and the memory of the Civil War began to dwindle.[11]

Conventions edit

  1. 1883, Denver: 13 states; 45 members[12]
  2. 1884, Minneapolis: 10,000 members[12]
  3. 1885, Portland, Maine: 22 departments, 23,000 members[12]
  4. 1886, San Francisco: 33,000 members[12]
  5. 1887, St. Louis, Missouri: 49,000 members[12]
  6. 1888, Columbus, Ohio: 63,000 members[12]
  7. 1889, Milwaukee, Wisconsin: 73,000 members[12]
  8. 1890, Boston, Massachusetts: 92,000 members[12]
  9. 1891, Detroit, Michigan: 100,000 members[12]
  10. 1892, Washington, D.C.[12]
  11. 1893, Indianapolis, Indiana[12]

Quotes edit

"For the women are much better at seeking out soldiers who are really in need of assistance than we are…A woman’s eyes are much quicker to perceive distress than a man’s." – Van Deer Voort, The National Tribune, December 21, 1882

“I cannot forget that our white soldiers, flying for their lives, were often glad to sleep in the beds, and share the coarse food of the loyal colored people. And I never knew or heard during all those terrible years of strife and blood, of a colored man, woman or child proving a traitor to the Union cause, or to the men who upheld it.......It seems to me that the question in the Woman’s Relief Corps should not be: whether a woman’s face is white or black, but whether her heart is white and loyal, and her life pure and generous.” Annie Wittenmyer Journal of the Eighth Annual Convention of the Woman’s Relief Corps, Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic, Boston, Massachusetts, August 13-14, 1890, 25-26.

"Although fifty-one corps were organized in Kentucky, they did not flourish as well as they might have, and in the course of time some disbanded, due to the fact that so many colored members met at the Department Convention with the white members. Although in entire sympathy with the Lincoln Proclamation, white women of the Southland do not associate so closely with the colored race, and thus the downward pathway was started." – Martha Francis Boyd, historian

Notable people edit

National presidents edit

  1. 1883-84, E. Florence Barker, Massachusetts (died Sept. 11, 1897)[13][14]
  2. 1884-85, Kate Brownlee Sherwood, Ohio (died Feb. 15, 1914)[13][14]
  3. 1885-86, Sarah E. Fuller, Massachusetts (died Dec. 15, 1913)[13][14]
  4. 1886-87, Elizabeth D'Arcy Kinne, California (died Jan. 7, 1918)[13][14]
  5. 1887-88, Emma Stark Hampton, Michigan (died Feb. 21, 1925)[13][14]
  6. 1888-89, Charity Rusk Craig, Wisconsin (died Nov. 11, 1913)[13][14]
  7. 1889-90, Annie Turner Wittenmyer, Pennsylvania (died Feb. 2, 1900)[13][14]
  8. 1890-91, Mary Sears McHenry, Iowa, (died July 26, 1912)[13][14]
  9. 1891-92, Sue A. Sanders, Illinois[13][14]
  10. 1892-93, Margaret Ray Wickens, Kansas (died Nov. 24, 1918)[14]>
  11. 1893-94, Sarah C. Mink, New York (died Dec. 3, 1896)[13][14]
  12. 1894-95, Emma Gilson Wallace, Illinois (died June 7, 1911)[13][14]
  13. 1895-96, Lizabeth A. Turner, Massachusetts (died April 27, 1907)[13][14]
  14. 1896-97, Agnes Hitt, Indiana (died Sept. 8, 1919)[13][14]
  15. 1897-98, Sarah J. Martin, Missouri (died April 3, 1900)[13][14]
  16. 1898-99, Flo Jamison Miller, Illinoi[13][14]
  17. 1899-1900, Harriet J. Bodge, Connecticut (died Nov. 19, 1923)[13][14]
  18. 1900-1901, Mary Lord Carr, Colorado[13][14]
  19. 1901-1902, Calista Robinson Jones, Vermont (died Jan. 30, 1913)[13][14]
  20. 1902-1903, Lodusky J. Taylor, Minnesota (died March 15, 1923)[13][14]
  21. 1903-1904, Sarah D. Winans, Ohio (died June 4, 1915)[13][14]
  22. 1904-1905, Fanny E. Minot, New Hampshire (died May 2, 1919)[13][14]
  23. 1905-1906, Abbie Asenath Adams, California[13][14]
  24. 1906-1907, Carrie R. Sparklin, California[13][14]
  25. 1907-1908, Kate E. Jones, New York (died April 2, 1916)[13][14]
  26. 1908-1909, Mary L. Gilman, Massachusetts[13][14]
  27. 1909-1910, Jennie Iowa Berry[13][14]
  28. 1910-1911, Belle C. Harris, Kansas (died Sept. 21, 1924)[13][14]
  29. 1911-1912, Cora M. Davis, Oregon[13]
  30. 1912-1913, Geraldine E. Frisbie, California[13]
  31. 1913-1914, Ida S. McBride, Indiana[13]
  32. 1914-1915, Sarah E. Fulton, New York (died May 16, 1926)[13]
  33. 1915-1916, Carrie T. Alexander-Bahrenburg, Illinoi[13]
  34. 1916-1917, Ida K. Martin, Minnesota[13]
  35. 1917-1918, Lois M. Knauff , Ohio (died Nov. 8, 1921)[13]
  36. 1918-1919, Eliza Brown-Daggett, New York (died April 28, 1926)[13]
  37. 1919-1920, Abbie Lynch, Pennsylvania[13]
  38. 1920-1921, Inez Jamison Bender, Illinois[13]
  39. 1921-1922, Agnes H. Parker, Massachusetts[13]
  40. 1922-1923, Marie L. Basham, Iowa[13]
  41. 1923-1924, Bell W. Bliss, Wisconsin[13]
  42. 1924-1925, Grace B. Willard, California[13]
  43. 1925-1926, Catherine McBride Hoster, Indiana[13]
  44. 1926-1927, Edith Mason Christy, Ohi[13]
  45. 2016–2018, Michelle Colburn[14]
  46. 2019–2022, Jessica Harrocks[14]
  47. Beth Thurston[15]
  48. Cher Petrovic

Other edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "womansreliefcorps.org – auxiliary to Grand Army of the Republic". Retrieved June 24, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Kennedy, John Christopher (2017). A Perfect Union: The Woman's Relief Corps and Women's Organizational Activism: 1861–1930.
  3. ^ "WRC – National Woman's Relief Corps, Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic, Inc". suvcw.org. Retrieved October 25, 2021.
  4. ^ Woman's Relief Corps, Department of Massachusetts (1895). History of the Department of Massachusetts, Woman's Relief Corps. The Library of Congress. Boston, E. B. Stillings & Co., Printers. p. 289.
  5. ^ Graves, Mary H. Representative Women of New England.
  6. ^ Sheehan-Dean, Aaron (December 2011). "Barbara A. Gannon . The Won Cause: Black and White Comradeship in the Grand Army of the Republic . (Civil War America.) Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 2011. Pp. xiv, 282. $39.95". The American Historical Review. 116 (5): 1503–1504. doi:10.1086/ahr.116.5.1503. ISSN 0002-8762.
  7. ^ a b c Chamberlain, Adam; Yanus, Alixandra B. (March 22, 2021). ""Our One Great Hope": The Interdependence of the Woman's Relief Corps and the Grand Army of the Republic". Armed Forces & Society: 0095327X2110015. doi:10.1177/0095327x211001536. ISSN 0095-327X. S2CID 233700796.
  8. ^ Woman's Relief Corps (1894). Rules and Regulations for the Government of the Woman's Relief Corps, Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic. Boston: E.B. Stillings and Co. p. 3.
  9. ^ Woman's Relief Corps (1892). Journal of the Tenth National Convention. Boston: E.B. Stillings and Co. pp. 507–511.
  10. ^ Woman's Relief Corps (1885). Proceedings of the Third National Convention. Boston: E.B. Stillings and Co. pp. 110, 120.
  11. ^ Woman's Relief Corps (1918). Journal of the Thirty-Sixth National Convention. Washington, D.C.: The National Tribune Company. p. 77.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Women of the G.A.R." Oakland Enquirer. April 19, 1910. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Journal of the Forty-sixth Convention of the National Woman's Relief Corps Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic. Denver, Colorado. September 18, 19, 20, 1928. Minneapolis, Minn.: Haps-Olson Co. 1928. Retrieved March 20, 2024 – via Hathitrust.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad "Women of the Woman's Relief Corps". www.ahgp.org. Retrieved March 31, 2021.
  15. ^ https://www.facebook.com/share/p/ZTPrhujNC4xUVFy/?mibextid=K35XfP

External links edit

  • Official website

woman, relief, corps, charitable, organization, united, states, originally, founded, official, women, auxiliary, grand, army, republic, 1883, organization, designed, assist, provide, post, relief, union, veterans, been, created, fraternal, organization, refuse. The Woman s Relief Corps WRC is a charitable organization in the United States originally founded as the official women s auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic GAR in 1883 1 The organization was designed to assist the GAR and provide post war relief to Union veterans 2 The GAR had been created as a fraternal organization and refused to allow women to join up until the creation of this auxiliary 2 It is largely dedicated to historical preservation of research and official documentation related to the WRC and GAR 1 E F Barker 1st National PresidentK B Sherwood 2nd Natl Pres S E Fuller 3rd Natl Pres E D Kinne 4th Natl Pres E S Hampton 5th Natl Pres C R Craig 6th Natl Pres A T Wittenmyer 7th Natl Pres M S McHenry 8th Natl Pres S A Sanders 9th Natl Pres M R Wickens 10th Natl Pres Contents 1 Background 2 Creation 3 Black Chapters 4 Rules 5 State Territory departments and post 6 Interdependence of the GAR and WRC 7 Memorial Day 8 Conventions 9 Quotes 10 Notable people 10 1 National presidents 10 2 Other 11 References 12 External linksBackground editThe WRC expresses that among other tenets a primary purpose is to perpetuate the memory of the Grand Army of the Republic a veterans advocacy organization for Union Army soldiers during the American Civil War The WRC is the GAR s only legally recognized auxiliary and was organized at the specific request of the GAR A formal Charter was drawn on July 25 and 26 1883 in Denver Colorado It was subsequently incorporated by Public Act of the 87th Congress on September 7 1962 3 The first elected National President of the organization was E Florence Barker 4 5 Creation editAs a result of women s roles in the war effort they became equipped with the leadership and organizational skills that positioned them well for philanthropic organizations They mobilized to provide aid to veterans and their families following the war The creation of these local charities paved the basis for the origin of the WRC From 1879 the primary criterion for eligibility to become a member of the WRC was loyalty to the Union cause and membership was not necessarily restricted to residents of Union States 2 The first chapter of the WRC began in Portland Maine 10 years prior to the more notable one in Massachusetts In 1879 a group of Massachusetts women from different associations started a secret organization that sought to more effectively unify the various local and state relief programs that had been loyal to the North during the American Civil War In 1890 a chapter of the WRC was introduced in New Hampshire and it along with the Massachusetts post formed the Union Board of New England 2 Black Chapters editWhile most organizations prevented African Americans from joining the WRC had numerous all black chapters in many urban cities across the country and various southern states also had detached black corps Although the south kept their chapters segregated the majority of the corps in the north were desegregated 2 One notable African American WRC member was Susie Taylor who helped organize Corps 67 in Boston Massachusetts in 1886 and over the next twelve years served as its secretary treasurer and president citation needed Two other black women Anna Hughes and Marilla Bradbury also held officer positions in the Martin Delaney Corps 2 Julia Mason Layton a black WRC member fought for the 1893 National Convention decision that allocated funds to African American southern members so that they could be trained to more efficiently organize and finance black veterans She also helped to create the first all black chapter in the Department of Potomac 6 In Massachusetts African American woman R Adelaide Washington was elected as the president of the St John Chambre Corps Her election was incredibly impressive considering at the time this chapter was dominated by white members 7 Rules editBeing the official auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic the WRC could not just operate as it wished or do whatever it pleased The founding members of the WRC had to write rules and regulations that the GAR would approve of and also ran along similar lines of what the GAR was doing The Rules and Regulations for the Government of the Woman s Relief Corps stipulated three main objectives The third of these objectives was to maintain true allegiance to the United States of America and teach patriotism and love of country 8 State Territory departments and post editThe numbers of state and territory departments and posts changed regularly from year to year In 1892 the WRC was made up of 45 departments provisional departments and detached corps of various territories and states There was a combined total of 2 797 corps chapters across the country In 1892 the WRC also had 98 209 members 9 Arizona Florida Georgia U S state Kansas Kentucky Maryland New Mexico New York state North Carolina Pennsylvania South Carolina Tennessee and Washington D C all also had WRC posts detached and attached by 1916 2 As desegregation of the state departments continued members at the national level such as president Abbie Addams wanted to halt black corps from being created She proposed this idea on the basis that black women were not educated enough nor interested in joining such an organization She also wanted to investigate black chapters and dissolve them if they did not have proper permits or licenses to hold group meetings 7 Interdependence of the GAR and WRC editThe WRC began as an auxiliary to the GAR but as the GAR began to decline the WRC was able to help promote the longevity of the republic Because the GAR required members to be veterans of the Union their numbers began to dwindle as generations passed In New Jersey the Ladies Loyal League was an auxiliary that was created by women who had evidence that they were related to Union veterans This group never reached the same level of importance nor power of the WRC whose members were abundant and reputable In the 20th century the WRC gained a political foothold as it lobbied for feminist policies and pensions for Union nurses as well as patriotic education 7 Memorial Day editEarly on in the creation of the WRC Memorial Day was used to teach patriotism and nationalism to children of all ages across the North there was an effort in the South but there was a great deal of resistance The members of the Woman s Relief Corps with the assistance of children would make floral wreaths and place them alongside American Flags at the graves of Union veterans and nurses who died during and since the Civil War 10 The members of the GAR and WRC viewed Memorial Day as a holy day but by 1915 the organizations were combating the view that Memorial Day was now a holiday and the memory of the Civil War began to dwindle 11 Conventions edit1883 Denver 13 states 45 members 12 1884 Minneapolis 10 000 members 12 1885 Portland Maine 22 departments 23 000 members 12 1886 San Francisco 33 000 members 12 1887 St Louis Missouri 49 000 members 12 1888 Columbus Ohio 63 000 members 12 1889 Milwaukee Wisconsin 73 000 members 12 1890 Boston Massachusetts 92 000 members 12 1891 Detroit Michigan 100 000 members 12 1892 Washington D C 12 1893 Indianapolis Indiana 12 Quotes edit For the women are much better at seeking out soldiers who are really in need of assistance than we are A woman s eyes are much quicker to perceive distress than a man s Van Deer Voort The National Tribune December 21 1882 I cannot forget that our white soldiers flying for their lives were often glad to sleep in the beds and share the coarse food of the loyal colored people And I never knew or heard during all those terrible years of strife and blood of a colored man woman or child proving a traitor to the Union cause or to the men who upheld it It seems to me that the question in the Woman s Relief Corps should not be whether a woman s face is white or black but whether her heart is white and loyal and her life pure and generous Annie Wittenmyer Journal of the Eighth Annual Convention of the Woman s Relief Corps Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic Boston Massachusetts August 13 14 1890 25 26 Although fifty one corps were organized in Kentucky they did not flourish as well as they might have and in the course of time some disbanded due to the fact that so many colored members met at the Department Convention with the white members Although in entire sympathy with the Lincoln Proclamation white women of the Southland do not associate so closely with the colored race and thus the downward pathway was started Martha Francis Boyd historianNotable people editNational presidents edit 1883 84 E Florence Barker Massachusetts died Sept 11 1897 13 14 1884 85 Kate Brownlee Sherwood Ohio died Feb 15 1914 13 14 1885 86 Sarah E Fuller Massachusetts died Dec 15 1913 13 14 1886 87 Elizabeth D Arcy Kinne California died Jan 7 1918 13 14 1887 88 Emma Stark Hampton Michigan died Feb 21 1925 13 14 1888 89 Charity Rusk Craig Wisconsin died Nov 11 1913 13 14 1889 90 Annie Turner Wittenmyer Pennsylvania died Feb 2 1900 13 14 1890 91 Mary Sears McHenry Iowa died July 26 1912 13 14 1891 92 Sue A Sanders Illinois 13 14 1892 93 Margaret Ray Wickens Kansas died Nov 24 1918 14 gt 1893 94 Sarah C Mink New York died Dec 3 1896 13 14 1894 95 Emma Gilson Wallace Illinois died June 7 1911 13 14 1895 96 Lizabeth A Turner Massachusetts died April 27 1907 13 14 1896 97 Agnes Hitt Indiana died Sept 8 1919 13 14 1897 98 Sarah J Martin Missouri died April 3 1900 13 14 1898 99 Flo Jamison Miller Illinoi 13 14 1899 1900 Harriet J Bodge Connecticut died Nov 19 1923 13 14 1900 1901 Mary Lord Carr Colorado 13 14 1901 1902 Calista Robinson Jones Vermont died Jan 30 1913 13 14 1902 1903 Lodusky J Taylor Minnesota died March 15 1923 13 14 1903 1904 Sarah D Winans Ohio died June 4 1915 13 14 1904 1905 Fanny E Minot New Hampshire died May 2 1919 13 14 1905 1906 Abbie Asenath Adams California 13 14 1906 1907 Carrie R Sparklin California 13 14 1907 1908 Kate E Jones New York died April 2 1916 13 14 1908 1909 Mary L Gilman Massachusetts 13 14 1909 1910 Jennie Iowa Berry 13 14 1910 1911 Belle C Harris Kansas died Sept 21 1924 13 14 1911 1912 Cora M Davis Oregon 13 1912 1913 Geraldine E Frisbie California 13 1913 1914 Ida S McBride Indiana 13 1914 1915 Sarah E Fulton New York died May 16 1926 13 1915 1916 Carrie T Alexander Bahrenburg Illinoi 13 1916 1917 Ida K Martin Minnesota 13 1917 1918 Lois M Knauff Ohio died Nov 8 1921 13 1918 1919 Eliza Brown Daggett New York died April 28 1926 13 1919 1920 Abbie Lynch Pennsylvania 13 1920 1921 Inez Jamison Bender Illinois 13 1921 1922 Agnes H Parker Massachusetts 13 1922 1923 Marie L Basham Iowa 13 1923 1924 Bell W Bliss Wisconsin 13 1924 1925 Grace B Willard California 13 1925 1926 Catherine McBride Hoster Indiana 13 1926 1927 Edith Mason Christy Ohi 13 2016 2018 Michelle Colburn 14 2019 2022 Jessica Harrocks 14 Beth Thurston 15 Cher PetrovicOther edit Carrie Thomas Alexander Bahrenberg national secretary Isabel Worrell Ball Emma Eliza Bower Nettie Sanford Chapin Jennie Florella Holmes Della Whitney Norton Pauline O Neill suffrage leader president of 2 Arizona corps Alice E Heckler Peters Kate Pier Susie King Taylor Mary Jewett Telford charter member Mandana Coleman Thorp Laura Rosamond White Hannah Tyler Wilcox Hannah R Cope PlimptonReferences edit a b womansreliefcorps org auxiliary to Grand Army of the Republic Retrieved June 24 2021 a b c d e f g Kennedy John Christopher 2017 A Perfect Union The Woman s Relief Corps and Women s Organizational Activism 1861 1930 WRC National Woman s Relief Corps Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic Inc suvcw org Retrieved October 25 2021 Woman s Relief Corps Department of Massachusetts 1895 History of the Department of Massachusetts Woman s Relief Corps The Library of Congress Boston E B Stillings amp Co Printers p 289 Graves Mary H Representative Women of New England Sheehan Dean Aaron December 2011 Barbara A Gannon The Won Cause Black and White Comradeship in the Grand Army of the Republic Civil War America Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2011 Pp xiv 282 39 95 The American Historical Review 116 5 1503 1504 doi 10 1086 ahr 116 5 1503 ISSN 0002 8762 a b c Chamberlain Adam Yanus Alixandra B March 22 2021 Our One Great Hope The Interdependence of the Woman s Relief Corps and the Grand Army of the Republic Armed Forces amp Society 0095327X2110015 doi 10 1177 0095327x211001536 ISSN 0095 327X S2CID 233700796 Woman s Relief Corps 1894 Rules and Regulations for the Government of the Woman s Relief Corps Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic Boston E B Stillings and Co p 3 Woman s Relief Corps 1892 Journal of the Tenth National Convention Boston E B Stillings and Co pp 507 511 Woman s Relief Corps 1885 Proceedings of the Third National Convention Boston E B Stillings and Co pp 110 120 Woman s Relief Corps 1918 Journal of the Thirty Sixth National Convention Washington D C The National Tribune Company p 77 a b c d e f g h i j k Women of the G A R Oakland Enquirer April 19 1910 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2024 via Newspapers com nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Journal of the Forty sixth Convention of the National Woman s Relief Corps Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic Denver Colorado September 18 19 20 1928 Minneapolis Minn Haps Olson Co 1928 Retrieved March 20 2024 via Hathitrust nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Women of the Woman s Relief Corps www ahgp org Retrieved March 31 2021 https www facebook com share p ZTPrhujNC4xUVFy mibextid K35XfPExternal links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Woman 27s Relief Corps amp oldid 1214628294, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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