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Interesting Geneaology Stuff (1 Viewer)

ragincajun

Footballguy
What ya got.

I had a great great something that was a deserter in the revolutionary war. It says it on his tombstone.  I had another great something that manned the western most outpost at the time around Travelers Rest, SC. Think Dances with wolves.

My Aunt traced us back to the Georgia Peach somehow.  I haven’t seen proof of this one, but Baseball does seem to run in the blood.  I had an Uncle who pitched in the 70s apparently, a Cousin who pitched at South Carolina, and I batted .700 when I played little league.   Hit my first double against this guy  https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Sheets :coffee:   I was struck out by some guy named Peyton Manning. No big deal.

 
Fun fact.  I always thought our family was from Germany.  My Ma in law bought me a German coat of arms for my family name for Christmas one year.  I proudly hung it in my office.  My dad came over one day and noticed it and started to laugh.  He said we were English.

 
I can only go back 6 generations since Cuban cemeteries haven't been cataloged yet like they have been here.  However, my surname is common through the Carribean & parts of South America.  According to my research, Sephardic Jews took the name of a rich dude in Portugal who was burned at the stake.  I actually found the date and did a "what day was it" and it turned out to be a Sat.  The Portuguese inquisitors probably caught them observing the Sabbath.  The group of people that took the name fled to the Canary islands, and some went to the Netherlands where the surname is on record from the 15th century in a synagogue.  Others became pirates, and went to the new world.  Interestingly, many of the pirates were Jews escaping the Inquisition & knocking off Spanish ships.  Specifically, early Portuguese & Spaniards in this hemisphere were likely conversos or crypto Jews.  I had know idea I may have had Jewish ancestors, but recently asked a 94yo uncle if he recalled, and he with 100% certainty said "yeah we're Jewish" like it's a known thing, despite nobody practicing & everyone being raised Christian.

 
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Uncle Dave

"Tinker" Dave Beatty: Civil War Union Guerilla

David Crockett Beaty was born on February 19, 1817 in the Obed River Valley in Fentress County, Tennessee. He stayed in that area for his entire life. His father George and two of his uncles had settled in the Valley upon their arrival from North Carolina, in 1810. The Beaty family was a prime example of kinship. Based on what historians know about the Beaty family, it can be concluded that they were a very tight knit group. Not much is known about Beaty’s childhood. Beaty would become most famous for his actions during the war between the states, especially for his one man war against notorious Confederate guerrilla Champ Ferguson.

     By the middle of the 19th century, slavery had become a hot topic in the United States. The North wanted to abolish it, but the South wanted to keep it. David Beaty had no strong feeling one way or the other on the slavery issue. In 1860, he was appointed by the Tennessee state legislature as one of three state supervising officials in charge of improvements along the Obed River. Beaty continued to be uninterested in the war until Confederate General Willis Scott Bledsoe came riding in to his farm one day demanding that Beaty take sides. Beaty was reluctant to do so, but finally gave in. Following the Battle of Mill Springs, Beaty became one of the most outspoken Unionists in Fentress County.

     After the visit by Bledsoe to his farm, Beaty, along with his sons Claiborne and Dallas, formed a company of sixty men. This group became known as “David Beaty’s Independent Scouts.” Most of Beaty’s men came from his community, and most were extremely poor. Others were deserters from the Union army, that felt that they could “do more at home with Tinker Dave’s men.” Beaty even had a few men, most notably the “Treat Brothers,” that switched sides, for reasons unknown to fight alongside Tinker Dave. This enlistment process was met with opposition from men such as Sidney Smith Stanton, and John P. Murray, who encouraged men in the Upper Cumberland to join their regiments, instead of joining up with guerrilla bands, but their pleas were to no avail. Together these men became the most brutal band of Union guerrillas in the Tennessee-Kentucky region. Beaty received financial assistance from Dr. Jonathan Hale, a prominent Jamestown physician. His most trusted confidant was Elam Huddleston, of Adair County, Kentucky. Huddleston was later shot and killed by Champ Ferguson, for reasons unknown. In his confession, Ferguson denies killing Huddleston. This incident only fueled the fire between Beaty and Ferguson. Beaty was provided horses by the Union army. Most of the men who joined Beaty’s guerrillas, had been affected by Champ Ferguson and his men in some way. Beaty, unlike Ferguson did not force the Union beliefs on his men. Instead he taught them the ways of the Union, and let them make up their own minds.

     It took the Union Army months to figure out a way that they could effectively use Tinker Dave and his scouts. Eventually Beaty was given authorization by General Ambrose Burnside to go out and bushwhack roads, opening them up to him and his soldiers. In return for this, Burnside gave Beaty and his scouts all the ammunition they needed. He also wanted military governor Andrew Johnson to make Beaty a colonel. The offer must have been extended to him, because Beaty turned it down. He claimed that he was “doing the best work where he was, in what he was doing.” Beaty, while a rough man, protected all Unionists, especially those in the Upper Cumberland.

     It is unknown how Beaty got the nickname “Tinker.” Some believe it was because he was always “tinkering” with something. The most widely accepted theory is that there were two David Beatys in Jamestown. The other was a drunkard known as “Cooly.” Beaty was given the name “Tinker” to differentiate him from “Cooly.” For the rest of the war, the name Tinker Dave Beaty would strike fear into many a Rebel.

     After forming his guerrilla band, Tinker Dave took his men down to the Cherry Creek community in Sparta, Tennessee, and split them up into squads. The men then went around the community demanding meals from Confederate sympathizers, as well as stealing their horses and ammunition. Young Amanda McDowell recorded in her diary, the looting that Beaty and his men were doing in her community. Tinker Dave and his men later sold the horses and sometimes cattle to Unionists in Kentucky. Beaty wanted to cause as much trouble for the Confederates as he could. By doing this he realized that he could lure Champ Ferguson out into the open and accomplish his goal of killing him.

     Tinker Dave and Champ Ferguson did not like each other for many reasons. Besides being supporters of opposite sides, it is also believed that Beaty was responsible for going to Ferguson’s White County home and ordering his wife and daughter to strip naked and make them cook for him and his men. There is no proof of this however. It is widely believed that both men simply wanted to protect their communities and neighbors and they were standing in each other’s way. The two men only came face to face a few times, never accomplishing their goal of eliminating the other. This, however, didn't deter them from hunting each other with savage like ferocity throughout the war.

     Beaty and Ferguson used some of the same tactics. They both lived in the woods, stole and plundered for food and ammunition, and were quick to kill anyone who got in their way. Both men and their bushwhackers were tough to track, because they knew the Upper Cumberland so well. They took advantage of the area’s many caves, hollows, and valleys. The two men had known each other for twenty years prior to the Civil War. They had more in common then they thought, they were just on different sides of the conflict. Even without Beaty and Ferguson, guerrilla violence would still have developed,  in the Upper Cumberland. The reason being is that it was, and still is human nature to fight for your family, friends, neighbors, and beliefs. During the Civil War, the Upper Cumberland became known as “no man’s land,” because of all the guerrilla violence in the area.

     Tinker Dave and Champ Ferguson came face to face only a handful of times during the Civil War. The first time was at Beaty’s farm. Ferguson and his men rode in dressed as Union soldiers. Beaty’s wife came to the door, as Tinker was in the field working. It is unknown how far the field was from the house, as Beaty knew that the visitor was Ferguson right away. Ferguson, however, did not recognize Beaty, as he turned his horse around and left. The two men came face to face again at the Battle of Dug Hill. The battle was a minor skirmish that occurred along what is now State Highway 84 between Monterey and Sparta. Ferguson and his men were lying in the bushes waiting for the Union army led by Colonel John Stokes to come passing by. When they got in sight, the men jumped out of the bushes and ambushed them. Beaty was riding along with Stokes, and the two men came face to face, wounding each other. The goal of eliminating each other had not been accomplished, but they still wounded each other severely enough to have to lay in bed for a few days.

     In 1862, it was ruled that no raids be made into Albany, Kentucky or Livingston, Tennessee. Beaty actually laid down his arms for a short time. This was an attempt at a truce between Union and Confederate guerrillas. This truce did not last long, and later that year, Tinker Dave was back raiding. He and his men were able to intercept and raid a wagon full of medical supplies and cattle, heading South. Later they were able to get ahold of some paper going south at the Taylor Place. They captured the Rebels and sent them back to where they had come from.

     By 1863, Beaty and his guerrillas began to attract the attention of high ranking Confederates. General Braxton Bragg, sent orders to Colonel John M. Hughs to go throughout Middle Tennessee and cleanse the area of bushwhackers, deserters, and enforce conscription laws. Hughs had other ideas, his mission from Bragg was quickly transformed into an eight month campaign to rid the area of guerrillas and guerrillas only. Beaty was at the top of Hughs’ list. He and his twenty men were able to unite scattered guerrilla bands, including Ferguson’s, and to help in this effort. On September 8, he and Tinker Dave finally engaged in a skirmish. It is unknown where the skirmish happened, but Hughs was able to kill eight of Beaty’s men. It is interesting to note about this skirmish, that the official report was not filed until April 28, 1864, a full eight months after the fact. A possible explanation for this could be that Hughs was to busy looting with Champ Ferguson and did not get around to it until eight months had passed. Another reason could be that Hughs had contempt for Braxton Bragg and wanted to make him wait just to spite him.

     By the following February Hughs, along with Willis Scott Bledsoe and Ferguson engaged in a skirmish in Fentress County with the Home Guards there. At this skirmish the three men and their inferiors overwhelmed a few of Beaty’s scouts, along with Rufus Dowdy and his men. After four or five casualties, Dowdy retreated. Ferguson went after them and found two of the Union guerrillas hiding out at a nearby farm. He found a member of Beaty’s men near a woodpile and shot him on the spot. It is unknown where Beaty was during this brief, but deadly skirmish.

     Throughout the Civil War, most bands of guerrillas acted as nomads. They would move around from place to place, plundering, and killing, then they would move on. Beaty and his men moved like this occasionally, but also had a hideout known as “Beaty’s Cave.” The cave was located in the mountains of Morgan County, Tennessee. It was referred to by Beaty as “Morgan’s Court House.” The cave was trenched, fortified, and the men also had thousands of acres of corn planted. Whenever a Rebel force came near, “Beaty’s Horn” would sound. Members of the Union League, as well as various Union sympathizers took refuge inside “Beaty’s Cave.” There is an account of a skirmish that took place near the cave. The account states that a 1,500 man Rebel Cavalry force attacked the cave, and Beaty and his men forced them to retreat with a desperate slaughter. This story, while very interesting, is nothing more then legend. 

     Champ Ferguson was not the only Confederate sympathizer that wanted Tinker Dave Beaty dead. In Overton County, a man named William Windall was determined to bring “Fentress down to Overton,” for reasons unknown. He knew that Beaty was a leading citizen and Unionist in the area and he wanted him dead. His goal became “To kill Tinker Beaty, and take all he has.” Windall, like Ferguson was unsuccessful in his attempt to kill Beaty.

     For the remainder of the Civil War, Beaty and his men continued to hide out in their cave, and protect the citizens of Fentress County. If there were any reports of Rebels riding through the area, one could expect Beaty and his scouts to stop them. One account tells of a group of Rebels that had taken up headquarters in a Fentress County church building. These men were engaged in horse thievery, robbery, and murdering innocent Union men. They used the church building to play cards, drink, swap stolen horses, and think of new tactics to terrorize Union citizens. Beaty was eventually informed of these meetings. He and his men went to the church and waited for them. Some hid in the bushes, others under the building. When the Rebels came back, they spotted Beaty and the rest of the Union guerrillas. They fled, but not before Beaty could shoot four of them, killing two and wounding two others.

     Tinker Dave Beaty, like Champ Ferguson, showed no sympathy to those siding with the Confederates. Legend tells of the time when he shot a man, for reasons unknown, and then ordered the man’s horse to stomp on his face. Beaty spent his entire career not only chasing after Champ Ferguson, but also protecting his family, friends, and neighbors. 

     When General Robert E. Lee surrendered his army to General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox on April 9, 1865, the Civil War was officially over. This was not the case for Champ Ferguson. Ferguson, unlike Beaty, refused to lay down his arms, and was still in hot pursuit of him. Three weeks after the war ended, Beaty was having supper at a friend’s home near Jamestown. Ferguson and his men rode up and ordered Beaty to surrender his arms, exit out of the house, and mount his horse. He then ordered Tinker Dave to take him to the home of Pleas Taylor. Beaty, being smarter then Ferguson, knew that it was a set up. He spurred his horse, and according to later accounts, “wheeled him like a flash.” Ferguson and his men were able to fire approximately twenty shots at Beaty, with only three hitting him, one in the back, shoulder, and hip. Beaty survived this abduction attempt, and it would all but seal the fate of Ferguson.

     Champ Ferguson was arrested at his home on May 26, 1865, and taken to the Tennessee State Prison in Nashville. In his confession, he stated that he “rarely aimed at anything but Tinker Dave.” His trial lasted from July until October of that same year. The first witness was called by the prosecution on July 20th. That person was none other then Tinker Dave Beaty. The testimony of Beaty took two days. He told the court that everything Ferguson was accused of doing, was true. When asked about the abduction attempt, Beaty raised his shirt and showed the court where the bullets had penetrated through his breast and shoulder. Beaty’s testimony was damning to Ferguson and resulted in him having little to no defense at all. Ferguson was sentenced to death, and hanged on October 20, 1865. If the South had won the Civil War, it could have very easily been Beaty on the gallows, rather then Ferguson.

     It is very much open for debate as to whether Tinker Dave Beaty was a regular bushwhacker, or a partisan. There is no evidence of him ever receiving a partisan commission under the Partisan Ranger Act, however according to the book Homegrown Yankees by James Alex Baggett, it can be proven that Beaty and his men received $125,000 as payment for their service during the Civil War. One unknown Union officer stated that “if Beaty had a regiment, he would do wonders.” Beaty was also widely regarded as a “rough man,” but the “savior of the Union” in his region. His brutality is often compared to notorious Kansas Jayhawker James H. Lane. Tinker Dave Beaty, while brutal in many of his tactics, was fully committed to protecting the people in his neighborhood, who shared his same beliefs, from Confederate threats.

     Tinker Dave Beaty passed away on August 22, 1876. His post war life is largely unknown, except for the fact that he served as a Jamestown Alderman. He is thought to have played a major role during Reconstruction. His son Claiborne became captain of the Tennessee State Guards, stationed on the Cumberland Plateau. This group was designed to protect freed slaves from Ku Klux Klan violence. Tinker Dave Beaty will be best remembered for his actions during the Civil War, but it is most interesting to note that Beaty was a common family man, and respected citizen, who wanted no part in the war, but ultimately realized that he had to take sides, in order to protect his family and friends. He became one of the most famous characters of his chosen side. His story is the stuff of legend, but in reality very far from it.

 
On both my mom and dad's side I can trace back 250 years to the same small area in Eastern Ontario. 

Literally a 50 mile radius.....for 250 years!!

Cant find much before that or where we came from originally. Seems likely they were part of a group of "loyalists" that left the US and settled in that area still controlled by Britain after the revolution. 

 
His most trusted confidant was Elam Huddleston, of Adair County, Kentucky. Huddleston was later shot and killed by Champ Ferguson, for reasons unknown.
Elam Huddleston is also in my family tree, by marriage (one of his cousins married one of my great-great uncles). The communities were so small back then that almost everyone was related to each other.

 
Fun fact.  I always thought our family was from Germany.  My Ma in law bought me a German coat of arms for my family name for Christmas one year.  I proudly hung it in my office.  My dad came over one day and noticed it and started to laugh.  He said we were English.
No offense, but this isn't at all "fun."

 
I never realized until the close ups tonight that it was *that* Doug Pederson I hung out with and had beers while flight after flight cancelled/delayed at Dallas Love a couple years back.

I knew him as Favre's backup, didn't realize he was coaching.   :bag:

You can swap genes over beers right?

 
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My fraternal Grandfather fought in WWI in the Canadian Army.  He was an orphan, raised in an orphanage in Ireland, later on he was later adopted by a Canadian family, he grew in Canada and later emigrated to the United States right after WWI.  I was telling my Mother-in-law about this one day.  She said "no kidding, you know my father was also in WWI."  It turns out my Grandfather enlisted to serve in the Army just 3 months after my wife's Grandfather in a city in a Canada about 30 miles south of my wife's Grandfather.  It's quite possible the two of them may have run across one another. My wife was born and raised in Canada, I was born and raised in NE Ohio.  Small world. :)

My paternal Grandfather was born in Germany, he emigrated to the U.S. sometime in the late 1870's.  He died in the 1930's right about at the height of WWII.  I've read and I've been told that many, many families of German immigrants were ashamed of their German heritage at that time.  My Aunt, my paternal Grandfather's daughter, listed my Grandfather as being French on his death certificate.  I can only assume this was to hide shame or embarrassment of his German heritage. 

 
My fraternal Grandfather fought in WWI in the Canadian Army. He was an orphan, raised in an orphanage in Ireland, later on he was later adopted by a Canadian family, he grew in Canada and later emigrated to the United States right after WWI. I was telling my Mother-in-law about this one day. She said "no kidding, you know my father was also in WWI." It turns out my Grandfather enlisted to serve in the Army just 3 months after my wife's Grandfather in a city in a Canada about 30 miles south of my wife's Grandfather. It's quite possible the two of them may have run across one another. My wife was born and raised in Canada, I was born and raised in NE Ohio. Small world.
Both my mom and my dad have an ancestor who came to America on the same ship in 1634.

My mom's ancestor ended up moving to North Carolina and starting a family there. One of his great-grandsons was part of a wagon train that moved to the "west" (Missouri, LOL) in the late 1700s. One day, my grandfather (my mom's dad) was telling us the story of how his ancestors moved from North Carolina to Missouri......and suddenly my grandmother interjected and said "Huh, my ancestors came to Missouri on a wagon train, too." So we did a little research, and sure enough it turns out that both of their ancestors were on the same wagon train.

But wait, there's more! Shortly after that, my brother was telling the above story to his father-in-law......and his father-in-law said, "That's interesting....my family is from that part of Missouri, too." So we checked the census records, and it turns out that in 1850, his family lived right down the road from my grandfather's family.

Small world, indeed.

 
I haven't found anything that earth shattering, but it was interesting to me.  I have 2 direct ancestors that fought in the civil war.  My maternal great great grandfather fought with the NJ 38th infantry.  My paternal great great great grandfather fought with the 91st PA infantry.

 
A few things I found interesting:

All 4 lines back through the fathers were here in the US prior to 1700.   So lots of ancestors that fought in the Revolutionary and Civil Wars.

My great, great, great, great grandparents were some of the early settlers of Sonoma County, less than 50 miles from where I live now (but I didn't grow up here).

My mom's dad's family is from the south, and she still has relatives throughout MS.  So it was not surprising but still strange to read wills that discussed what to do with the slaves.  

 
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My great, great, great, great Aunt Florence.

Florence Nightingale

Biography

Nurse(1820–1910)

Florence Nightingale was a trailblazing figure in nursing who greatly affected 19th- and 20th-century policies around proper care. She was known for her night rounds to aid the wounded, establishing her image as the 'Lady with the Lamp.'

Synopsis

Florence Nightingale was born in Florence, Italy, on May 12, 1820. Part of a wealthy family, Nightingale defied the expectations of the time and pursued what she saw as her God-given calling of nursing. During the Crimean War, she and a team of nurses improved the unsanitary conditions at a British base hospital, greatly reducing the death count. Her writings sparked worldwide health care reform, and in 1860 she established St. Thomas' Hospital and the Nightingale Training School for Nurses. A revered hero of her time, she died on August 13, 1910, in London.

Background and Early Life

Florence Nightingale was born on May 12, 1820, in Florence, Italy, the city which inspired her name. The younger of two daughters, Nightingale was part of an affluent British clan that belonged to elite social circles. Her mother, Frances Nightingale, hailed from a family of merchants and took pride in socializing with people of prominent standing. Despite her mother's interests, Florence herself was reportedly awkward in social situations and preferred to avoid being the center of attention whenever possible. Strong-willed, she often butted heads with her mother, whom she viewed as overly controlling.

Florence's father was William Edward Nightingale (having changed his original surname, "Shore"), a wealthy landowner who would be associated with two estates—one at Lea Hurst, Derbyshire, and the other at Embly, Hampshire. Florence was provided with a classical education, including studies in mathematics along with German, French and Italian.

From a young age, Nightingale was active in philanthropy, ministering to the ill and poor people in the village neighboring her family’s estate. Nightingale eventually came to the conclusion that nursing was her calling; she believed the vocation to be her divine purpose.

When Nightingale approached her parents and told them about her ambitions to become a nurse, they were not pleased and forbade her to pursue appropriate training. During the Victorian Era, where English women had almost no property rights, a young lady of Nightingale's social stature was expected to marry a man of means to ensure her class standing—not take up a job that was viewed by the upper social classes as lowly menial labor. 

In 1849, Nightingale refused a marriage proposal from a "suitable" gentleman, Richard Monckton Milnes, who had pursued her for years. She explained her reason for turning him down, saying that while he stimulated her intellectually and romantically, her "moral…active nature" called for something beyond a domestic life. (One biographer has suggested that the rejection of marriage to Milnes was not in fact an outright refusal.) Determined to pursue her true calling despite her parents' objections, Nightingale eventually enrolled as a nursing student in 1850 and '51 at the Institution of Protestant Deaconesses in Kaiserswerth, Germany.

Crimean War

In the early 1850s, Nightingale returned to London, where she took a nursing job in a Harley Street hospital for ailing governesses. Her performance there so impressed her employer that Nightingale was promoted to superintendent. Nightingale also volunteered at a Middlesex hospital around this time, grappling with a cholera outbreak and unsanitary conditions conducive to the rapid spread of the disease. Nightingale made it her mission to improve hygiene practices, significantly lowering the death rate at the hospital in the process.

In October of 1853, the Crimean War broke out. Allied British and French forces were at war against the Russian Empire for control of Ottoman territory. Thousands of British soldiers were sent to the Black Sea, where supplies quickly dwindled. By 1854, no fewer than 18,000 soldiers had been admitted into military hospitals.

At the time, there were no female nurses stationed at hospitals in the Crimea. After the Battle of Alma, England was in an uproar about the neglect of their ill and injured soldiers, who not only lacked sufficient medical attention due to hospitals being horribly understaffed but also languished in appallingly unsanitary conditions.

Pioneering Nurse

In late 1854, Nightingale received a letter from Secretary of War Sidney Herbert, asking her to organize a corps of nurses to tend to the sick and fallen soldiers in the Crimea. Given full control of the operation, she quickly assembled a team of almost three dozen nurses from a variety of religious orders and sailed with them to the Crimea just a few days later.

Although they had been warned of the horrid conditions there, nothing could have prepared Nightingale and her nurses for what they saw when they arrived at Scutari, the British base hospital in Constantinople. The hospital sat on top of a large cesspool, which contaminated the water and the building itself. Patients lay in their own excrement on stretchers strewn throughout the hallways. Rodents and bugs scurried past them. The most basic supplies, such as bandages and soap, grew increasingly scarce as the number of ill and wounded steadily increased. Even water needed to be rationed. More soldiers were dying from infectious diseases like typhoid and cholera than from injuries incurred in battle.

The no-nonsense Nightingale quickly set to work. She procured hundreds of scrub brushes and asked the least infirm patients to scrub the inside of the hospital from floor to ceiling. Nightingale herself spent every waking minute caring for the soldiers. In the evenings she moved through the dark hallways carrying a lamp while making her rounds, ministering to patient after patient. The soldiers, who were both moved and comforted by her endless supply of compassion, took to calling her "the Lady with the Lamp." Others simply called her "the Angel of the Crimea." Her work reduced the hospital’s death rate by two-thirds.

In addition to vastly improving the sanitary conditions of the hospital, Nightingale instituted an "invalid's kitchen" where appealing food for patients with special dietary requirements was prepared. She also established a laundry so that patients would have clean linens. as well as a classroom and library for intellectual stimulation and entertainment.

Recognition and Appreciation

Nightingale remained at Scutari for a year and a half. She left in the summer of 1856, once the Crimean conflict was resolved, and returned to her childhood home at Lea Hurst. To her surprise she was met with a hero's welcome, which the humble nurse did her best to avoid. The previous year, Queen Victoria had rewarded Nightingale's work by presenting her with an engraved brooch that came to be known as the "Nightingale Jewel" and by granting her a prize of $250,000 from the British government.

Nightingale decided to use the money to further her cause. In 1860, she funded the establishment of St. Thomas' Hospital, and within it, the Nightingale Training School for Nurses. Nightingale became a figure of public admiration. Poems, songs and plays were written and dedicated in the heroine's honor. Young women aspired to be like her. Eager to follow her example, even women from the wealthy upper classes started enrolling at the training school. Thanks to Nightingale, nursing was no longer frowned upon by the upper classes; it had, in fact, come to be viewed as an honorable vocation.

Based on her observations during the Crimea War, Nightingale wrote Notes on Matters Affecting the Health, Efficiency and Hospital Administration of the British Army, a massive report published in 1858 analyzing her experience and proposing reforms for other military hospitals. Her research would spark a total restructuring of the War Office's administrative department, including the establishment of a Royal Commission for the Health of the Army in 1857. Nightingale was also noted for her statistician skills, creating coxcomb pie charts on patient mortality in Scutari that would influence the direction of medical epidemiology.

Later Life

While at Scutari, Nightingale had contracted the bacterial infection brucellosis, also known as Crimean fever, and would never fully recover. By the time she was 38 years old, she was homebound and routinely bedridden, and would be so for the remainder of her long life. Fiercely determined and dedicated as ever to improving health care and alleviating patients’ suffering, Nightingale continued her work from her bed.

Residing in Mayfair, she remained an authority and advocate of health care reform, interviewing politicians and welcoming distinguished visitors from her bed. In 1859, she published Notes on Hospitals, which focused on how to properly run civilian hospitals.

Throughout the U.S. Civil War, she was frequently consulted about how to best manage field hospitals. Nightingale also served as an authority on public sanitation issues in India for both the military and civilians, although she had never been to India herself.

In 1907, she was conferred the Order of Merit by King Edward, and received the Freedom of the City of London the following year, becoming the first woman to receive the honor. In May of 1910, she received a celebratory message from King George on her 90th birthday.

Death and Legacy

In August 1910, Florence Nightingale fell ill, but seemed to recover and was reportedly in good spirits. A week later, on the evening of Friday, August 12, 1910, she developed an array of troubling symptoms. She died unexpectedly at around 2 p.m. the following day, Saturday, August 13, at her home in London.

Characteristically, she had expressed the desire that her funeral be a quiet and modest affair, despite the public's desire to honor Nightingale—who tirelessly devoted her life to preventing disease and ensuring safe and compassionate treatment for the poor and the suffering. Respecting her last wishes, her relatives turned down a national funeral. The "Lady with the Lamp" was laid to rest in her family's plot at St. Margaret's Church, East Wellow, in Hampshire, England.

The Florence Nightingale Museum, which sits at the site of the original Nightingale Training School for Nurses, houses more than 2,000 artifacts commemorating the life and career of the "Angel of the Crimea." To this day, Florence Nightingale is broadly acknowledged and revered as the pioneer of modern nursing.

 

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