Women in the nineteenth century were beginning to liberate themselves. Thus, when the Civil War came along, many women were not content to sit home and set up fund-raisers for the cause. According to the book “Century Of The Struggle” by Elenor Flexner “The influx of women into teaching and their entrance into government offices data from Civil War. Thousands more broke away from stove and laundry tub to look for work in the cities or to do the heavy manual labor required to keep the family homestead going as recorder by Anna Howard Shaw”(106). As a result women began to unchain there chains and began to become fearless. Mrs. Flexner gives us some great examples of women that help and contributed the soldiers during the Civil War (110); for instance: Dorothea Dix known for her work in reforming prisons and insane asylums, at the age of sixty, head of the nursing service in the Union army hospitals(110). The “Mothers” Bickerdyke and Clara Barton, who saw the…
Rebecca Felton began to work to persuade men to take action, restore the South to its pre-Civil War vitality, and address the issues of women’s interest. She believed that men must be held accountable, and during her 1887 address at the Women’s Christian Temperance Union state convention she argued that women fulfilled their duties as wives and mothers, but men undervalued their importance.…
Women back then were treated like subordinates. Traditionally, their only role was to marry, bare children, stay home and take care of the family. They had no say to political views. Women raise their sons to be a future leader. However, since the Second Great Awakening and after the American Civil War, women became more outspoken, opinionated and even took some of the men’s role at their home since most men never returned home from the war. Women started to see other possibilities. They worked outside their homes; they became great workers and teachers. Most of these women created a movement for women’s rights and they spurred a great wave of social reform. The potential for religious, political and social influence in women was…
Before the cilvil war, the role of women in society was different. A typical women in that society was supouse to stay at home with the childern and perform household chorses, while the men were the bread earners. However, this ideololgy, began to shifft as women started to enter the workforce. A huge shift in the workforce occured immediatly after the civial war. African american women jump right into the workforce because they needed earn a steady income after geting freed from salvery.…
When the Civil War broke out, women were still not seen as equals. That did not women from doing everything that men did, they worked as spies, prison guards, scouts, cooks, nurses, and they fought in combat. Women were forbidden by the Union and Confederate armies to enlist. Although women knew the law, over 1,000 women had disguised themselves and enlisted as men. Women who did not serve in combat, worked as nurses because they needed help on the front with injured soldiers.…
Nursing was a major field where many women went into. Women brought a nourishing role to the battlefield. Middle-class women who were nurse had to overcome prejudice because they were not used to this kind of activity. Women also had work as a clerical worker during the Civil War. Nursing and clerical work were the first avenues for middle-class women as an alternative to marriage and motherhood.…
War, it affects the world and everybody involved; the soldiers, government, and citizens. Most people only focus on the impact of it on the soldiers, but never take the time to think how it impacted the women at home and on the battlefield. The idea of a woman’s role in society has been ever-changing, and still is to this day. There was always a sense among women that they lacked in jobs and respect when compared to their male counterparts, but society never saw it, until the outbreak of the Civil War, that is. The Civil War was the turning point for women because it gave them jobs at home, on the battlefield, and created the Red Cross Society, giving women a chance to show the world what they have to offer.…
The women were affected by the Civil war because when the men left the homes the women had to take their roll at home.Women during the civil war dressed up as men to go help fight in the war. Eventually, in the 1860s laws were made to made provoke women from fighting in the war.…
During the American Revolution, fighting in the war was considered too much work for the women in the family. Only men were allowed to serve as soldiers during this time because they were the only ones able to understand military strategy. Although women were considered unskilled and uneducated about the war, they also had a great impact on the victory of the war. Because they severed several roles, women were the primary reason men were able to function during the revolutionary war. Women had a lot of roles in the war such as nurses, cooks, spies and so much more. Many of the women who took on these roles started out as camp followers seeking safety, housing, food for their family and work. These women needed the army, and while Washington and many officers didn’t like to admit it, the army needed women (“Revolutionary War”).…
The role of women in the Civil War was multifaceted and diverse on both sides of the battle lines. For whatever reason women decided to enlist in the army, they faced more hurdles than their male counterparts, and for this reason, remain significant.[footnoteRef:1] During the Civil War, there were specific roles tailored for and occupied by women, such as the role of ““vivandieres” or Daughters of the Regiment”[footnoteRef:2] These “paramilitary roles”[footnoteRef:3] were most often than not, created by women themselves, and they served as “morale-boosters and sources of comfort and inspiration.”[footnoteRef:4] These women, the so called Daughters of the Regiment, suffered the same difficulties as their male…
Typically, when we think of the Civil War, we think of the role of men during that time. History books reflect on the men that had fought and died in the war. While many may believe men were the only ones that contributed in the Civil War that isn't actually the case. Women also had a large impact on the outcome of this war. During the war, women took on new roles to support their families. Women were generally viewed as primary caretakers of the home and of children. Previously throughout history they didn’t usually take part in the same roles that men did. During the Civil War, women not only took on their usual roles of being in control of the home life, they actually joined in on the war…
To describe a typical woman’s life during the antebellum era would be a gross oversimplification of the varying lives of women based on social status and structure. Women of wealth, common white women and enslaved women conducted their lives as an adaptation to domestic sphere and social sphere which influenced their roles. While the cult of domesticity remained intact, the role of southern women differed drastically among social classes. From organizing and hosting large gatherings to long hours laboring in the fields, the typical antebellum woman’s domestic sphere was directly affected by status in the social hierarchy. Enslaved women in the antebellum south suffered immensely, although some were not willing to play the role of the submissive slave.…
Women’s rights are the fight for the idea that women should have equal rights with men. Over history, this have taken the form of gaining property rights, the women’s suffrage, or the right of women to vote, reproductive rights, and the right to work for equal pay. The American Civil War illustrates how gender roles can be transformed when circumstances demand that women be allowed to enter into previously male-dominated positions of power and independence. This was the first time in American history that women played a significant role in a war effort, and by the end of the war the notion of true womanhood had been redefined.…
Although it is not a common thought, women had a part in the Civil war and a lot of great things happened for them back at home. Women actually fought in the war and helped out many soldiers as nurses and doctors. Some things that will be mentioned are how women had a direct involvement in the war with crossdressing and being nurses, how the women back home helped America, and how slave women were treated during this era and war. This era was an important part in women’s history. Many opportunities were created for women in America, including jobs and seeing more of the world outside of their homes.…
The American Civil War had an impact on everyone in the country. Women were no exception. Phelps defines Civil War by saying, “Civil war exists when two or more opposing parties within a country resort to arms to settle a conflict or when a substantial portion of the population takes up arms against the legitimate government of a country.” Many people today do not realise the effect that women had on this war. Without them, the war could have had a very different outcome. Women held an array of different jobs at this time. The women were tired of sitting on the sidelines, they wanted to stand up for the beliefs they had. There was now more of having other people fight for them, they were going to get what they deserved. They broke free of the chains of conformity that bound them to their simple jobs. They would range anywhere from staying at home and tending t the farm to dressing up like men and actually fighting. Equal to the men, although not always seen as it, women held an array of different jobs during the civil war.…