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Massachusetts Women's History Heritage Trail
Item 24 of 31
On February 12th 1914, the Civil War Army Nurses Memorial was unveiled in the Massachusetts State House in what is now known as Nurses’ Hall. The bronze statue, which depicts an army nurse supporting a fallen solider on the battlefield while she nurses his wounds, was created by Bela Lyon Pratt. This memorial was commissioned by the Army Nurses Memorial Association and sponsored by the Daughters of Veterans of the Civil War. To this day, the Nurses Memorial receives many visitors who come to learn about or pay their respects to the men and women who fought in the Civil War.

Civil War Army Nurses Memorial by Bela Lyon Pratt Photography by Edda Kirsch

Civil War Army Nurses Memorial by Bela Lyon Pratt
Photography by Edda Kirsch

Civil War Army Nurses Memorial by Bela Lyon Pratt Photography by Edda Kirsch

Civil War Army Nurses Memorial by Bela Lyon Pratt
Photography by Edda Kirsch

Civil War Army Nurses Memorial Plaque by Bela Lyon Pratt Photography by Edda Kirsch

Civil War Army Nurses Memorial Plaque by Bela Lyon Pratt
Photography by Edda Kirsch

Civil War Army Nurses Memorial by Bela Lyon Pratt Photography by Edda Kirsch

Civil War Army Nurses Memorial by Bela Lyon Pratt
Photography by Edda Kirsch

The Civil War Army Nurses Memorial was first unveiled in the Massachusetts State House on February 12, 1914. This memorial was donated to the State House in 1911 by the Army Nurses Memorial Association of the Massachusetts Department, Daughters of Veterans. The Nurses Memorial was officially instated in the State House following a Senate Resolution that approved the addition of this new memorial into the State House collection. In the Senate Resolution, the location of the memorial was clearly defined and stated and to this day the memorial remains at the easterly side of the Senate staircase in the Massachusetts State House.

This memorial is dedicated to the nurses who served in the Civil War and helped aid wounded soldiers in the midst of battles. The bronze memorial was sculpted by Bela Lyon Pratt and depicts a nurse on her knees, supporting a wounded soldier in the battlefield. She is supporting his body and holding the man up as if she were his only source of life. The plaque beneath the sculpture reads: “Angels of Mercy and Life Amid Scenes of Conflict and Death.”

During the unveiling of this statue in 1914, the surviving Massachusetts Army Nurses were invited as guests of honor along with various members of the Legislature and the Sons and Daughters of Veterans. The memorial itself was officially presented to the Commonwealth by Agnes I. McCoy, Department President of the Army Nurses’ Memorial Association and was unveiled by the granddaughter of an army nurse, Dorothy Standish Lewis.

During the American Civil War women nurses were very uncommon and it was quite hard for women to achieve such a status. However, many of these women who ended up as Civil War nurses had family members take part in the battles. The women at home could not stand to think that their husbands, brothers, and fathers were out on the battlefield risking their lives for their country while they safely remained home, waiting for the war to end. Also, many women were concerned that their family members were not receiving the proper care on the battlefield because of the lack of nurses. Due to their worries for their enlisted loved ones many women looked for opportunities to help in any way they could. Many women began to be recruited through the Army Medical or the U.S. Sanitary Commission. Although even in these institutions women were banned from the battlefield, they were given responsibilities to monitor camp and hospital conditions near the battlefields and to distribute supplies and food to wounded soldiers. As in this time it was rare for a woman to become a nurse and those who managed to achieve this status were greatly praised for their service to the wounded.

This memorial was created to commemorate all of the female nurses who also risked their lives while caring for the thousands of wounded soldiers during the Civil War. This memorial was placed on the eastern side of the Senate staircase in a room which used to be named Staircase Hall.  However, in 1984 an act of the Massachusetts Legislature officially changed the name of Staircase Hall to Nurses Hall in order to properly commemorate the memorial in the room and define as a landmark.

 Burrill, Ellen Mudge. The State House, Boston, Massachusetts. Printed under the direction of the Sergeant-at-Arms by order of the General Court, 1933.

Galvin, William Francis. Nurses Hall. Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. https://www.sec.state.ma.us/trs/trsbok/nurs.htm.  

Massachusetts. General Court. Senate. Documents, Issues 1-336.. University of Chicago,, 1911. https://books.google.com/books?id=hVZBAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA209&lpg=RA1-PA209&dq=the+nurses+memorial+ass...

Mayor's  Office of Arts and Culture. Army Nurses Memorial. http://www.publicartboston.com/content/army-nurses-memorial. 

http://www.boston-discovery-guide.com/war-memorials.html.

http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WMNR2P_Civil_War_Army_Nurses_M

https://malegislature.gov/VirtualTour/Artifact/75