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Day - 9 Confederate
Heritage Month Minute
By: Calvin E. Johnson, Jr.
Kate Cumming, Confederate Nurse
Kate Cumming was a remarkable woman.
Born in Edinburgh, England, in 1835, her family first made their move to
Montreal Canada. They would move next to Mobile, Alabama, where Kate,as
young woman, quickly adopted to the Southern way of life. It has been
written that Cumming was intelligent and courageous in all she did. Kate
did not support secession, but, when the South was invaded, she was quick
to criticize the actions of Union President Abraham Lincoln. She became a
strong supporter of the Confederate cause and looked down at those
Southerners who were less patriotic. She believed that every able bodied
man and woman should do whatever they could for the South.
In 1862, Kate Cumming helped wounded soldiers at
the Battle of Shiloh and in that summer helped in such places as Corinth
and Chattanooga. She enlisted in the Confederate armies medical department
as a hospitals Matron. Kate was strong in her opinion and an outgoing
woman. Her assertedness would help her work with Dr. S.H. Staub, who
believed in the use of woman in hospitals. Kate was known for running very
efficient and clean hospital wards and in seeing to every need of the
patients and keeping a adequate kitchen.
After the War between the States, in 1866, Kate
Cumming published in Mobile, Alabama the "Journal of Hospital Life in the
Southern Wartime Hospitals." She also believed that Southern women should
take an active part in helping disabled ex-Confederate soldiers.
Kate Cumming never married but she got involved
with her friends of such Southern organizations like the United Daughters
of the Confederacy and United Confederate Veterans.
By: Calvin E. Johnson, Jr.,
Chairman,
Confederate History and Heritage Month Committee
Georgia Division Sons of Confederate Veterans.
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