| Barton, Clara,
full name CLARISSA HARLOWE BARTON (1821-1912), American humanitarian and
founder of the American Red Cross (see Red Cross).
Barton was born in Oxford, Massachusetts, December 25, 1821, and educated
at home, chiefly by her two brothers and two sisters. She was a teacher
at first and the founder of various free schools in New Jersey. In 1854
she became a clerk in the Patent Office, Washington, D.C., but resigned
at the start of the American Civil War to work as a volunteer, distributing
supplies to wounded soldiers. After the war she supervised a systematic
search for missing soldiers. Between 1869 and 1873 Barton lived in Europe,
where she helped establish hospitals during the Franco-Prussian War and
was honored with the Iron Cross of Germany. Through Barton's efforts the
American Red Cross Society was formed in 1881; she served as the first
president of the organization until 1904. In 1884 she represented the
United States at the Red Cross Conference and at the International Peace
Convention in Geneva. She was responsible for the introduction at this
convention of the "American amendment," which established that
the Red Cross was to serve victims of peacetime disasters as well as victims
of war. She superintended relief work in the yellow-fever pestilence in
Florida (1887), in the Johnstown, Pennsylvania, flood (1889), in the Russian
famine (1891), among the Armenians (1896), in the Spanish-American War
(1898), and in the South African War (1899-1902). The last work that she
personally directed was the relief of victims of the flood at Galveston,
Texas, in 1900. She died in Glen Echo, Maryland, on April 12, 1912. She
wrote several books on the Red Cross and Story of My Childhood (1907).
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