Alcott, Louisa May:
Authored Little Women; volunteered for 6 weeks as a nurse in the Union Army during the American Civil War and wrote a book called Hospital Sketches (pub. 1863) based on her experience; Hospital Sketches received popular and critical acclaim at the time of publication
- Freely available resources
- Image:
- UVA School of Nursing blog:
- Text of , access provided by Tufts University
- Subscription/paid resources
- Choperena, A., & Fairman, J. (2018). Louisa May Alcott and Hospital Sketches: An innovative approach to gender and nursing professionalization. Journal of advanced nursing, 74(5), 1059–1067.
- Seiple, S. (2019). . Seal Press, Hatchett Book Group.
Cannary, Martha Jane (Calamity Jane)
Cared for the sick in Deadwood, SD during the smallpox epidemic of 1878
- Freely available resources
- Rapid City Journal:
- Black Hills Visitor:
- Gehrke, K. (2015).
- Subscription/paid resources
- Herda, D.J. (2018). . TwoDot.
Lincoln, Mary Todd
Volunteered in the hospitals in Washington, DC after the Battle of the First Bull Run and in the Union hospitals during the American Civil War
- Freely available resources
- “,” from OSU
- , from Lippincott’s NursingCenter blog
- Subscription/paid resources
- Baker, Jean Harvey. "." Americans at War, edited by John P. Resch, vol. 2: 1816-1900, Macmillan Reference USA, 2005, pp. 105-106. Gale eBooks
Tubman, Harriet
Having escaped enslavement, she served as a nurse to the Gullah people and in the Union hospitals during the American Civil War
- Freely available resources
- “,” from New York State Nurses Association
- “,” from the UVA School of Nursing blog
- Subscription/paid resources
- . (2015). American History, 50(2), 8.
Whitman, Walt
Whitman moved to Washington, DC especially to volunteer to care for the wounded at Union hospitals during the American Civil; many of his works were inspired by his experiences there
- Freely available resources
- “,” from the Smithsonian
- “: Walt Whitman and Washington’s Civil War hospitals,” from the Walt Whitman Archive
- “,” from the National Humanities Center
- “,” by Walt Whitman, access by the Poetry Foundation
- Subscription/paid resources
- Hsu D. (2010). Walt Whitman: an American Civil War nurse who witnessed the advent of modern American medicine. Archives of environmental & occupational health, 65(4), 238–239.
- Foley, S., Sofer, D., & Jacobson, J. (2000). I Am Faithful, I Do Not Give out. The American Journal of Nursing, 100(10), 48-49. 2307/3522316">doi:10.2307/3522316