The most famous civil war nurse was Clara Barton. She founded the American Red Cross, and worked as a teacher, patent clerk, and humanitarian, in addition to her work as a nurse.
Clara Barton was not a scientist, she was a Civil War Nurse ("Angel of the Battlefield"), Founder of the American Red Cross. Also she was a first Missing Persons Investigator, first female U.S. Patent Office Clerk, and teacher at 16 years old.
If it is the office of one nurse, this is correct - nurse's office. If it is the office of a group of nurses, this is correct - nurses' office.
She was a school teacher in New Jersey when starting at the age of 15. Then she became a U.S. Patent office clerk. While working there she learned of the need for medical supplies to treat the wounded from the first Bull Run. She decided to set up a drive and collected medical supplies. Soon the Union was letting her ride in the medical carts with the wounded. She helped as a nurse and tried to keep them possitive. Then she became a nurse and obtained the nickname "Angel of the Battlefield". There she founded The Red Cross and was president of the Red Cross before retiring and dying.
Clara Barton, back during the civil war left the local nurses office to help out with wounded soldiers that were fighting in the civil war
Patent confidentiality cannot be broken or mishandled by office staff or by a doctor or nurse. Clearly information between a nurse, doctor and office billing person must be communicated. However, in no circumstances can a medical office person call out to the waiting room and ask a patient if for example, " How are your headache problems doing ?"
Clara Barton is called the angel of the battlefield for many different reasons. She helped soldiers at the front line of battle. She also wrote letters to the family and friends of injured or sick soldiers informing them on their loved one's condition. Clara was also the first one to go to the front lines because she was brave and was not afraid to help others, even if it meant putting her own life on the line. In this way she was like an angel to the soldiers, on the battlefield and off.
she was a nurse.. her nickname is , "the angel of the battlefield"
What American woman aided wounded soldiers on the battlefield during the civil war TO IMPROVE THE ANSWER. Many women helped wounded soldiers on the battlefields and in the hospitals and not only tended to them but also had a pivotal role in improving the sanitary organization. Some bright example: Dorothea Dix of the United States Sanitary Commission and Clara Barton who earned the nickname "the Angel of the Battlefield", became "Head Nurse" in the Army of the James, was placed by Lincoln in charge of the search for the missing men of the Union Army and in 1881 started the American Red Cross.
Mary Seacole was the nurse who helped care for soldiers in the Crimean War.
Yes She was a teacher,the president of the red cross,first woman clerk in the U.S. patent office,civil war nurse, wrote booksand a poem, and helped Susan B. Anthony
Clarissa Harlowe Barton, better known as Clara, was born on Christmas Day in 1821, She worked as a teacher, patent clerk, and humanitarian, in addition to being a hospital nurse. Toward the end of the Civil War, she established a hospital at the Andersonville prison camp. After the war she ran the Office of Missing Soldiers, to help find or identify soldiers killed or missing in action. She established the American Red Cross on May 21, 1881.