The United States Sanitary Commission
has just made an eloquent appeal to the women of the Nation. Few
are aware of the good this Commission has done. We confess to having
never realized it ourselves till we heard its President, the Rev. Dr. Bellows,
deliver an address on the subject in the Academy of Music, Philadelphia.
The Sanitary Commission is undoubtedly the best, if not the only safe way
of reaching the sick and wounded of the army, with anything like system.
Contributions to its stores can always be made effective, as its thorough
national organization and official recognition by the military authorities,
give it facilities for communication with and transportation to distant
points, possessed by no other organization; while one almost necessary
result of sending supplies through the numerous well-meaning independent
relief societies is that some localities are overburdened with useful stores,
while other places are comparatively destitute.
We do not mean to disparage other
associations designed to aid sick and suffering soldiers. But however
much good they may do, they would do more, generally, if working in direct
aid of the Sanitary. One of the circulars of the Sanitary truthfully
says:--"Little or no reliance can be had that articles sent to individual
sick or wounded will ever reach their destination. We have good authority
for saying that over twenty thousand undelivered packages for soldiers
are now awaiting owners in the store-house of one express company in Washington.
We believe that no express company ever undertakes to deliver packages
to a particular individual or company. Boxes are perhaps taken to
within five or six miles of the desired spot, but they are as useless there
as if they had never been forward at all. No regimental transportation
can be depended on for their conveyance, as regimental wagons are fully
occupied in other service. The Sanitary Commission does not and cannot
undertake to deliver specific articles to individuals, or to particular
regiments, but adopts the broad principle of attending faithfully to
the wants of any and every sick and wounded soldier who can be reached.
It is, we believe, the only organization which is national and permanent
in its character, having store-houses and branch offices in the principal
cities of the country, and should have innumerable contributing aid societies
in every county throughout the land, as it already has in many.
It has transportation trains of its own following the armies in
the field, in addition to unusual governmental facilities, and,, in the
pursuit of its humane mission, knows no North, South, East, or West.
Large supplies of under-clothing for the sick and wounded soldiers---of
prepared soups and jellies, wines, fruits, and other delicacies and articles
of nourishment, so indispensable on such occasions, have always been on
hand with the agents of the Commission, at the times and places most needed;
and abundant testimony has been furnished that thousands of lives
have been saved by the prompt administration of such stimulants and restoratives
to the exhausted and almost perishing victims of some bloody and perhaps
unexpected battle, by the faithful and devoted physicians and nurses connected
with Commission."
Nor does the circular exaggerate,
in the least, the utility of the Sanitary. After the battle of Antietam,
the Sanitary agents were first on the field; and two days elapsed before
even the government stores came up. This was because the railroad,
which the government employed for transportation, was broken down; while
the Sanitary, depending upon wagons, drove night and day, and so was in
time. Think what the wounded would have suffered, after that terrible
conflict, if it had hot been for the Sanitary! At Fredericksburg
the services of the Sanitary were equally signal. "The agents of
the Commission," says one of their circulars, "were promptly on the ground,
and, acting in conjunction with the regular medical authorities, materially
aided in having the wounded of that bloody struggle, better cared for on
the spot, and more expeditiously and comfortably removed to hospitals,
than
after any previous battle. These results were largely
due to the wise foresight of the Commission, enabled by the contributions
of a liberal public to accumulate large quantities of the necessary supplies
at such points as were most accessible for the purposes required."
With eight hundred thousand men in
the field, the drain on the resources of the Sanitary is enormous.
It is not money only that is needed. To an even greater degree, things
are required that money cannot buy, at least immediately. What is
wanted are woolen, Canton flannel, and cotton material; cotton shirts,
flannel undershirts, woolen shirts, ordinary size and make; woolen stockings,
blankets, quilts, towels, ring pads and cushions, stuffed with hair or
feathers, bed-ticks; Canton flannel shirts and drawers, cotton drawers,
woolen drawers, ordinary size and make; dressing-gowns, handkerchiefs,
good size, sheets four feet wide and eight feet long, pillows, flannel
(by piece); jellies, cocoa, dried fruit, chocolate, whiskey, pure lemon
syrup, brandy, pickles, white wine (for wine whey). Preserves, jellies,
and all articles contained in bottles and jars, in order to carry safely,
should be securely packed in small boxes (marked glassware). Much
loss, from the breaking of bottles and jars, has heretofore resulted from
their not being properly packed.
To maintain a constant supply of these
articles the aid of ladies is indispensable. And this aid should
be systematized. Societies, subsidiary to the Sanitary Commission,
exist in many places. But there should be such a society, composed
of women, in every city, town, and village in the land. In Philadelphia,
though there has existed, from the first, a principal branch of the National
Commission, the ladies have lately established a "Women's Pennsylvania
Branch of the U.S. Sanitary Commission." This association has taken
rooms at 1307 Chestnut street, and elected Caleb Cope President and Treasurer,
and Mrs. Bloomfield H. Moore Corresponding Secretary. In an address,
just printed, the association says:-- "Our appeal is based upon the knowledge
that this Commission (the U.S. Sanitary) has greater facilities for doing
this work than any state or local agency--that out of the thousands of
boxes distributed by them, but one has been lost--that their agents are
notified of the time of an army's advance, and permitted to transfer their
stores to as near the front as possible--and that they are the only organization
authorized by government to pass within the lines, and administer their
supplies on the field of battle for the saving of life and the relief of
sufferings, knowing no difference between men from any section. This
work must be left undone if THE WOMEN of the land do not keep the Sanitary
Commission supplies with the means of doing it. For this purpose,
the women of Philadelphia have organized and invite every other woman in
the city and state, and surrounding counties of other states, to co-operate
with us. A small amount of self-denial, or of exertion on the part
of each, would insure to the Commission an exhaustless supply of those
needed stores. There is no time to be lost. Let every county,
every town organize and put themselves in communication with us without
delay. We know not how many lives depend upon our exertions--how
much suffering rests with us to relieve. Let us assume these duties
solemnly, with the determination that while the war lasts, we will devote
our energies to this sacred cause."
To give this noble appeal larger circulation,
to do what we can to alleviate the miseries of this terrible strife, we
have written this article. It is not a question of party, for all
parties can unite in this humane work. It is not a matter of charity
either, it is a holy duty. Christ said, "Even as ye did it unto the
least of one of these, ye did it unto me."
On one of the pages of the cover,
we print a letter, from the Rev. Dr. Bellows, which enters into this subject
at even more detail. We hope every one interested in the matter will
peruse it.
We would add the Western women can
send their supplies to Chicago, where the U.S. Sanitary has an agency.