Hammond’s Secret Weapon
Thirty-three year old newly appointed Surgeon General of the
Army, William A. Hammond inherited a seemingly insurmountable issue. The timely delivery to the battlefield of
desperately needed medical supplies. A
large part of the problem seemed to be inherent in how the military logistics
system worked in 1861. Logistics, or the
transportation accompanying the army hauling needed supplies, seemed logical
enough. After the infantry came the
artillery, the cavalry normally preceding the march and covering the rear of
the army. Next in line would be
ordnance, otherwise the army would be powerless. After ordnance came food for both soldiers
and the heart of transportation, horses, mules and oxen. Lastly advanced medical supplies because, if
the army did not conduct battle, there was little need for more than what the
medical personnel could carry. At the
end would be any non-government entities and army followers that may, or may
not, be needed to benefit the army. Once
the battle commenced with huge casualties, medical supplies became scarce within
a very short time. As it became acutely
evident earlier in the war, timely supply and assistance could mean the
difference between life and death.
Supply Depot during the Civil War
Little did the Quartermaster in command of supply depots in
Washington know that one day, sitting in front of him a woman wracked by
frustration and incapable of stopping a flow of tears, would be Hammond’s
solution. Then-Major Daniel Rucker,
after facing a day of endless appointments from all sorts of people needing or
wanting something from him, was probably at his wits-end when his visitor broke
down after another long day of waiting and almost certain rejection. How could he help her, he inquired. She apologized for her weak and
weariness. The lady explained that all
she would like was to deliver her three warehouses of supplies to needy
soldiers in the field. All she needed
was a pass and transportation for the goods.
Asst. QM General Daniel Rucker
Did she say three warehouses full? The army could certainly use the help. At that time, however, the bulk of the army
resided just outside his office building and where ever space was available in
Washington. He might be able to secure
passes for her in the future, but the future was uncertain at that time. She did return home to her boarding room
across town without what she waited all day to accomplish.
Wagon train in pursuit of Army
Miss Clara Barton, determined to support and contribute to
the war effort in some significant way, worked then as a copyist in the Patent
Office. The past Christmas she turned
forty, and could not decide her role in the fraternal social system popular in
the young United States of America. The
role society expected her to play included marriage, bearing her husband’s
children, raising them to be well educated, good Christians and contributing
members of the American public. Miss
Barton haughtily rejected this role for herself. She did not oppose the role for those who
chose it, but thought she could contribute so much more without the responsibilities
of the traditional American woman.
Raised and educated as an equal to her male cousins living near the
Barton homestead in Oxford, Massachusetts, she knew that she could accomplish
anything they might try. She had already
proven that over her entire childhood, and her family acknowledged the fact by
employing her to keep the accounting books for her oldest brother’s mill. Miss Barton had tested for and received her
teaching certificate at the age of seventeen and taught boys and girls in New England
for eighteen years. Additionally, after
moving to Washington in 1854, the Commissioner of the Patent Office employed
Miss Barton, at the same pay as men, as a confidential clerk. Not only did she prove to be a very competent,
she discovered a ring of thieves inside the Patent Office who had rejected
patent applications and sold the patents to others for personal gain. Patent office historians would consider her
employer, Judge Charles Mason, as the Commissioner best known for reform
because of her work.
Miss Barton was wise enough to know that she could not
accomplish much without the support of influential men and fortunately
cultivated some friendships over her years in Washington. Political troubles compelled Judge Mason to
leave town, but he would return later.
On the top of Miss Barton’s list until 1875 stood the Honorable Senator
from Massachusetts, Henry Wilson. Daniel
Rucker and William Hammond would become staunch supporters as well as several
officers and surgeons that accepted Barton’s assistance. Family support for her included her brother’s
acceptance of a quartermaster commission in order to help keep Barton in the
field. Wilson was particularly
important, holding the position of Chairman of the Military Affairs committee,
and frequent visitor of the White House.
After departing Rucker’s office, Miss Barton still did not
fathom the importance she would play on the battlefield. Hammond and his Medical Director in the
military’s largest army, the Army of the Potomac, Jonathan Letterman, as well
as Rucker, would use Barton to circumvent the system. Through a cultivated “spy,” Miss Barton
learned in September 1862 that McClellan expected to engage the enemy in force
outside of Harpers Ferry, Virginia.
Hurrying to Rucker’s office, she asked if the information was true and
could she get passes. Rucker obtained
passes for Barton and supplied an army wagon for transportation. The trip would be a test of Barton’s pluck, and
she passed beyond Rucker’s expectations.
Not only did Barton withstand the horrors of battle, she cleverly passed
the army supply train during the night and camped on the battlefield the day
before fighting commenced. From then on,
Barton became Hammond’s secret weapon.
As one officer found during the campaign, Barton knew she was not bound
by army regulations to stay anywhere, or prohibited from acting without
orders. During the Maryland Campaign of
1862, Barton re-supplied an estimated 17 field hospitals the day after the
battle and provided lanterns for night-time surgeries. Each time she ventured to the field she
improved in the quality and quantity of critically needed supplies and support.
Cdv of Barton during the War
Although they never wrote about Barton’s value as an outside
player, Hammond and Rucker at least were easily intelligent enough to realize
how Barton could help. Hammond’s secret
weapon would help them speed up the arrival of medical supplies, but she was
also an influential advocate for military medical reform. Largely through civilian pressure on
Congress, the military medical system evolved from a disaster of epic
proportions to the prototype for military medicine around the world. Miss Barton would go on to contribute
significantly not only to her country, but internationally in promoting the
permanent organization of disaster relief for victims of war and natural
disasters. In the war for saving lives, score Hammond one, death zero.
Army Surgeon General William A. Hammond
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