The Widow-Maker - Civil War Women’s Fight with the Pension Office
March 7, 2020 National Museum of Civil War Medicine 48 E Patrick
Street, Frederick, MD 21701 301-695-1864 2:30 PM to 3:30 PM Included
with admission; Museum Members - Free E-MAIL | VISIT WEBSITE Overview
Map Overview Come to the National Museum of Civil War Medicine on
Saturday March 7 at 2:30 PM to hear the rarely told story of women’s
battle for pensions following the Civil War. After the Civil War,
women were left to care for their veteran husbands, only to be denied
their widow’s pension because they were “too independent.” Then
the real fight began. Join Dr. Ashley Bowen as she shares the history
of these women and the shifting ideas of government, gender,
responsibility, and independence in the aftermath of the Civil War.
When soldiers went marching home, there was no support system in place
to care for their physical or psychological wounds. Instead, the
Pension Office provided varying amounts of financial support to each
soldier, and expected the women of the house to handle everything
else. The wives of Civil War soldiers were responsible for the work of
nursing their veterans—shaving their veterans, helping them eat, and
bathing them—while also taking on many of the responsibilities that
defined a nineteenth century father and husband, including manual
labor, financial decision making, and farm management. When their
husbands died, many of these women were told they would not receive
their widow’s pension. According to the War Department, by caring
for their husbands, the women had proven themselves too independent to
need financial assistance. The program begins at 2:30 PM in the
Delaplaine Randall Conference Room at the National Museum of Civil War
Medicine and is included with admission price, FREE for NMCWM members
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21/03/2020 Last update