Clara Barton

@Humanitarian, Birthday and Childhood

Clara Barton was an American nurse, teacher and founder of the American Red Cross

Dec 25, 1821

MassachusettsHumanitarianAmericanMiscellaneousNursesCapricorn Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: December 25, 1821
  • Died on: April 12, 1912
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Humanitarian, Miscellaneous, Nurses
  • City/State: Massachusetts
  • Siblings: David Barton, Dorothea, Sally Barton Vassall, Stephen
  • Known as: Clarissa Harlowe

Clara Barton born at

North Oxford, Massachusetts, U.S.

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Birth Place

She chose not to marry all her life. However, it is speculated that she was romantically involved with a person named John J. Elwell.

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Personal Life

She passed away at the age of 90 in Montgomery County, Maryland, United States.

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Personal Life

In the year 1975, her home in Glen Echo was made into a historic site and was named the Clara Barton National Historic Site, the first National Historic Site dedicated to a woman.

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Personal Life

Clarissa Harlowe Barton was born in Oxford, Massachusetts to Capt. Stephen Barton, a farmer and a selectman, and Sarah Stone.

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Childhood & Early Life

Since the age of three, she had exceptional reading and spelling skills and attended the Col. Stones High School, but was a very shy kid.

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Childhood & Early Life

She first found her calling as a nurse at the age of eleven, when she took care of her sick brother David, who miraculously recovered under her care even after doctors had given up.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1838, at the age of seventeen, she worked as a teacher in Massachusetts where she showed extraordinary skill in handling troublesome children.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1850, she attended the Clinton Liberal Institute in New York, where she studied writing and languages. Following her education, she set up a free school in New Jersey.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1855, she shifted to Washington D.C., where she took up the job of a clerk in the US Patent Office. Here, her salary was equal to that of a man, which was uncommon in those days. After a brief period, the issue of appointment of a woman in government office faced strong opposition and hence her position was reduced to that of a copyist and she was later fired in 1856.

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Career

In 1861, she was again appointed to the US Patent Office and started serving as a temporary copyist and wished to grant more opportunities for women to work in the government offices.

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Career

By 1862, she obtained permission to work at the front lines of the battle field during the American Civil war and distributed first aid supplies to hospitals, camps and treated wounded soldiers on the field.

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Career

In 1864, she started serving as ‘lady in-charge’ at the behest of Union General, Benjamin Butler, at the hospitals located at the front of the Army of the James - the regiment that served along the James River, Virginia.

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Career

After the conclusion of the American Civil war, she worked at the Office of Missing Soldiers which was located at 437 Seventh Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C. The organisation tracked missing soldiers and reunited them with their families.

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Career

She founded the American Red Cross, which is a universally recognised humanitarian organisation of great repute. It makes available emergency assistance to victims in the U.S.A and is the 3rd most popular charity/non-profit organization in America.

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Major Works