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Princess Agnes Salm-Salm, wife of Prince Felix of Prussia, who served with the Union Army, observed in January 1862 that the
winter camp of the Army of the Potomac was “teeming with women.” Some wives insisted on staying with their husbands, which
may have been the case with this woman, judging by her housewifely pose alongside a soldier, three young children, and a puppy.
In addition to taking care of her own family, she may have worked as a camp laundress or nurse. Some women who lacked the
marital voucher of respectability were presumed to be prostitutes and were periodically ordered out of camp. Only gradually
during the four years of the war, and in the face of unspeakable suffering, were women grudgingly accepted by military officials
and the general public in the new public role of nurse.
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