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Cornelia Hancock

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Cause of death
  
Nephritis

Known for
  
Civil War nurse

Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Cornelia Hancock


Occupation
  
Nurse

Role
  
Nurse

Years active
  
1863-1865

Books
  
South after Gettysburg

Cornelia Hancock Cornelia Hancock and Euphemia Goldsborough at Gettysburg

Born
  
8 February 1840 (
1840-02-08
)
Hancock's Bridge, New Jersey

Resting place
  
Cedar Hills Friends Cemetery in Harmersville, New Jersey

Died
  
December 31, 1927, Atlantic City, New Jersey, United States

Residence
  
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

A soldier s friend civil war nurse cornelia hancock


Cornelia Hancock (February 8, 1840 – December 31, 1927) was a celebrated volunteer nurse, serving the injured and infirmed of the Union Army during the American Civil War. Hancock's service lasted from July 6, 1863 to May 23, 1865.

Contents

Cornelia Hancock Cornelia Hancock Was Determined To Serve As A Nurse During

Early life

Cornelia Hancock Cornelia Hancock Was Determined To Serve As A Nurse During

Hancock was born in Hancock's Bridge, New Jersey, to Quakers of old colonial ancestry. The youngest of four children, Hancock was educated "in the Salem (county) academies." Her sister Ellen worked at the United States Mint in Philadelphia. Her only brother and her cousins joined the Union Army in 1862.

Civil War service

Cornelia Hancock Cornelia Hancock Civil War Nurse

Hancock's chance to serve came when her brother-in-law (Ellen's husband) Henry T. Child, a volunteer surgeon, offered to take her to the Gettysburg battlefield in July 1863.

Cornelia Hancock Looking for a pic of Cornelia Hancock American Civil War Forums

However, Dorothea Dix, the superintendent of Union Army nurses, personally refused to enroll Hancock because she did not meet her requirements that the military's female nurses be, "mature in years (at least 30), plain almost to homeliness in dress, and by no means liberally endowed with personal attractions.” In other words: at only 23, Hancock was too young and attractive to be an army nurse. Hancock was the only female nursing volunteer to be rejected.

Cornelia Hancock Cornelia Hancock Was Determined To Serve As A Nurse During The Civil War

Hancock went to Gettysburg anyway. "I got into Gettysburg the night of July sixth – where the need was so great that there was no further cavil about age,” she wrote in her journal. In a letter to her sister dated July 8, 1863, Hancock wrote "We have been two days on the field; go about eight and come in about six—go in ambulances of army buggies...I feel assured I shall never feel horrifed at anything that may happen to me here-after." Hancock responded to an immense need: the Union lacked supplies as well as staff. She had no formal training as a nurse; but after three weeks, she was tending to eight tenths of wounded. In October she tended to the large numbers of hungry and injured escaped slaves who were arriving in Washington, DC.

Cornelia Hancock Cornelia Hancock 18401927 was a nurse at Gettysburg who has been

On February 10, 1864, Hancock joined the II Corps, and served with them at the Battle of the Wilderness and the Siege of Petersburg. She worked in the II Corps hospital at the Depot Field Hospital in City Point.

Post-War

Cornelia Hancock Cornelia Hancock Clara Barton Museum

After the war, she opened a school for African Americans in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina. In Philadelphia, she founded several charity organizations. She was a board member of the Children's Aid Society 1883 to 1895, and helped children orphaned after the Johnstown Flood. She also served as president of the National Association of Army Nurses of the Civil War.

In 1914, Hancock retired to Atlantic City to live with her niece. She died of nephritis in 1927 and her ashes were buried at Cedar Hills Friends Cemetery in Harmersville, New Jersey.

She never married.

Legacy

Her popular collection of wartime letters is no longer in print.

A commemorative flagstone was placed in her honor at the Alloway Creek Friends Meeting House.

References

Cornelia Hancock Wikipedia