
Katharine Prescott Wormeley (1830–1908)
Author of The Other Side of War - On the Hospital Transports with the Army of the Potomac
About the Author
Works by Katharine Prescott Wormeley
The Other Side of War - On the Hospital Transports with the Army of the Potomac (1998) 15 copies, 1 review
A Memoir of Honoré de Balzac 6 copies
The Ruin of a Princess, as told by The Duchesse d'Angouleme, Madame Elizabeth, Sister of Loius XVI, and Clery, the King' (2009) 2 copies
Works of Honore de Balzac 2 copies
The Pocket Balzac: The Comedie Humaine of the Honore de Balzac - Pere Goriot and The Marriage Contract (The Pocket Balzac) (1904) 1 copy
Ursula 1 copy
The red inn 1 copy
Associated Works
Diary and Correspondence of Count Axel Fersen, Grand-Marshal of Sweden : Relating to the Court of France (1999) — Translator, some editions — 7 copies
La Comédie Humaine of Honoré De Balzac: Père Goriot, the Marriage Contract V. 2. Memoirs of Two Young Married Women. Albert Savarus (French Edition) — Translator — 1 copy
A Marriage Contract — some editions — 1 copy
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Common Knowledge
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Reviews
The Other Side of War - On the Hospital Transports with the Army of the Potomac by Katherine Prescott Wormeley
This is a 1998 paperback edition of a work first published in 1889 by Katherine Prescott Wormeley, a volunteer nurse with the U.S. Sanitary Commission, which assigned women of good standing to Hospital Transports with the Army of the Potomac during the early days of the Civil War. The book is actually a series of letters written by Wormeley to her mother and several other close friends during the time she and numerous other women worked to ease the suffering of Union and Confederate soldiers show more during the Peninsular Campaign. During the spring and summer of 1862, the U.S. Sanitary Commission worked together with the Quartermaster Corps of the Army to supply and man several steamships as floating hospitals. These facilities were meant to supplement the vastly overcrowded field hospitals run by the Army Medical Department. After the peninsular Campaign was over, a new Medical Director, Jonathan Letterman, was appointed to lead the Army Medical Department. He reorganized the hospital service, phasing out the need for floating hospitals. Wormeley’s letters present a clear picture of the practice of medicine during the 1860s, and provide interesting sketches of well known personalities such as Frederick Law Olmsted, and General George McClellan. Her own admirable personality also shines through her letters, albeit unintentionally. For example, Katherine, whose duties frequently required her to move from steamship to steamship in the harbor and from steamship to land based hospital and back again, turned out to be afraid of traveling in the "small boats" and the process of clambering up and down the ships ladders necessary to move around. Regardless of her fears, however, she perseveres. In this, she personifies the attitudes of her peers, calmly accepting "duty" regardless of personal discomfort. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 12
- Also by
- 22
- Members
- 35
- Popularity
- #405,583
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 7
