<SPAN name="c4" id="c4"></SPAN>
<h3>Mary A. Livermore.</h3><SPAN href="images/c4livermore.jpg"><br/>
<ANTIMG src="images/c4livermore_t.jpg" alt= "MARY A. LIVERMORE." /></SPAN>
<p>When a nation passes through a great struggle like our Civil
War, great leaders are developed. Had it not been for this,
probably Mrs. Livermore, like many other noble women, would be
to-day living quietly in some pleasant home, doing the common
duties of every-day life. She would not be the famous lecturer,
the gifted writer, the leader of the Sanitary Commission in the
West; a brilliant illustration of the work a woman may do in
the world, and still retain the truest womanliness.</p>
<p>She was born in Boston, descended from ancestors who for six
generations had been Welsh preachers, and reared by parents of
the strictest Calvinistic faith. Mr. Rice, her father, was a
man of honesty and integrity, while the mother was a woman of
remarkable judgment and common sense.</p>
<p>Mary was an eager scholar, and a great favorite in school,
because she took the part of all the poor children. If a little
boy or girl was a cripple, or wore shabby clothes, or had
scanty dinners, or was ridiculed, he or she found an earnest
friend and defender in the courageous girl.</p>
<p>So fond was she of the five children in the home, younger
than herself, and so much did she take upon herself the
responsibility of their conversion, that when but ten years
old, unable to sleep, she would rise from her bed and waken her
father and mother that they might pray for the sisters. "It's
no matter about me," she would say; "if they are saved, I can
bear anything."</p>
<p>Mature in thought and care-taking beyond her years, she was
still fond of out-door sports and merry times. Sliding on the
ice was her especial delight. One day, after a full hour's fun
in the bracing air, she rushed into the house, the blood
tingling in every vein, exclaiming, "It's splendid sliding!"
"Yes," replied the father, "it's good fun, but wretched for
shoes."</p>
<p>All at once the young girl saw how hard it was for her
parents to buy shoes, with their limited means; and from that
day to this she never slid upon the ice.</p>
<p>There were few playthings in the simple home, but her chief
pastime was in holding meetings in her father's woodshed, with
the other children. Great logs were laid out for benches, and
split sticks were set upon them for people. Mary was always the
leader, both in praying and preaching, and the others were good
listeners. Mrs. Rice would be so much amused at the queer
scene, that a smile would creep over her face; but Mr. Rice
would look on reverently, and say, "I wish you had been a boy;
you could have been trained for the ministry."</p>
<p>When she was twelve years old she began to be eager to earn
something. She could not bear to see her father work so hard
for her. Alas! how often young women, twice twelve, allow their
father's hair to grow white from overwork, because they think
society will look down upon them if they labor. Is work more a
disgrace to a girl than a boy? Not at all. Unfortunate is the
young man who marries a girl who is either afraid or ashamed to
work.</p>
<p>Though not fond of sewing, Mary decided to learn
dressmaking, because this would give her self-support. For
three months she worked in a shop, that she might learn the
trade, and then she stayed three months longer and earned
thirty-seven cents a day. As this seemed meagre, she looked
about her for more work. Going to a clothing establishment, she
asked for a dozen red flannel shirts to make. The proprietor
might have wondered who the child was, but he trusted her
honest face, and gave her the bundle. She was to receive six
and a quarter cents apiece, and to return them on a certain
day. Working night after night, sometimes till the early
morning hours, she was able to finish only half at the time
specified.</p>
<p>On that day a man came to the door and asked, "Does Mary
Rice live here?"</p>
<p>The mother had gone to the door, and answered in the
affirmative.</p>
<p>"Well, she took a dozen red flannel shirts from my shop to
make, and she hain't returned 'em!"</p>
<p>"It can't be my daughter," said Mrs. Rice.</p>
<p>The man was sure he had the right number, but he looked
perplexed. Just then Mary, who was in the sitting-room,
appeared on the scene.</p>
<p>"Yes, mother, I got these shirts of the man."</p>
<p>"You promised to get 'em done, Miss," he said, "and we are
in a great hurry."</p>
<p>"You shall have the shirts to-morrow night," said Mrs.
Rice.</p>
<p>After the man left the house, the mother burst into tears,
saying, "We are not so poor as that. My dear child, what is to
become of you if you take all the cares of the world upon your
shoulders?"</p>
<p>When the work was done, and the seventy-five cents received,
Mary would take only half of it, because she had earned but
half.</p>
<p>A brighter day was dawning for Mary Rice. A little later,
longing for an education, Dr. Neale, their good minister,
encouraged and assisted her to go to the Charlestown Female
Seminary. Before the term closed one of the teachers died, and
the bright, earnest pupil was asked to fill the vacancy. She
accepted, reciting out of school to fit herself for her
classes, earning enough by her teaching to pay her way, and
taking the four years' course in two years. Before she was
twenty she taught two years on a Virginia plantation as a
governess, and came North with six hundred dollars and a good
supply of clothes. Probably she has never felt so rich since
that day.</p>
<p>She was now asked to take charge of the Duxbury High School,
where she became an inspiration to her scholars. Even the
dullest learned under her enthusiasm. She took long walks to
keep up her health and spirits, thus making her body as
vigorous as her heart was sympathetic.</p>
<p>It was not to be wondered at that the bright young teacher
had many admirers. Who ever knew an educated, genial girl who
was not a favorite with young men? It is a libel on the sex to
think that they prefer ignorant or idle girls.</p>
<p>Among those who saw the beauty of character and the mental
power of Miss Rice was a young minister, whose church was near
her schoolhouse. The first time she attended his services, he
preached from the text, "And thou shalt call his name Jesus;
for he shall save his people from their sins." Her sister had
died, and the family were in sorrow; but this gospel of love,
which he preached with no allusion to eternal punishment, was
full of comfort. What was the minister's surprise to have the
young lady ask to take home the sermon and read it, and
afterwards, some of his theological books. What was the
teacher's surprise, a little later, to find that while she was
interested in his sermons and books, he had become interested
in her. The sequel can be guessed easily; she became the wife
of Rev. D.P. Livermore at twenty-three.</p>
<p>He had idolized his mother; very naturally, with deep
reverence for woman, he would make a devoted husband. For
fifteen years the intelligent wife aided him in editing <i>The
New Covenant</i>, a religious paper published in Chicago, in
which city they had made their home. Her writings were always
clear, strong, and helpful. Three children had been born into
their home, and life, with its cares and its work, was a very
happy one.</p>
<p>But the time came for the quiet life to be entirely changed.
In 1861 the nation found itself plunged into war. The slave
question was to be settled once for all at the point of the
bayonet. Like every other true-hearted woman, Mrs. Livermore
had been deeply stirred by passing events. When Abraham
Lincoln's call for seventy-five thousand men was eagerly
responded to, she was in Boston, and saw the troops, all unused
to hardships, start for the battle-fields. The streets were
crowded with tens of thousands. Bells rung, bands played, and
women smiled and said good-bye, when their hearts were
breaking. After the train moved out of the station, four women
fainted; nature could no longer bear the terrible strain. Mrs.
Livermore helped restore the women to consciousness. She had no
sons to send; but when such partings were seen, and such
sorrows were in the future, she could not rest.</p>
<p>What could women do to help in the dreadful struggle? A
meeting of New York ladies was called, which resulted in the
formation of an Aid Society, pledging loyalty to the
Government, and promising assistance to soldiers and their
families. Two gentlemen were sent to Washington to ask what
work could be done, but word came back that there was no place
for women at the front, nor no need for them in the hospitals.
Such words were worse than wasted on American women. Since the
day when men and women together breasted the storms of New
England in the <i>Mayflower</i>, and together planted a new
civilization, together they have worked side by side in all
great matters. They were untiring in the Revolutionary War;
they worked faithfully in the dark days of anti-slavery
agitation, taking their very lives in their hands. And now
their husbands and sons and brothers had gone from their homes.
They would die on battle-fields, and in lonely camps untended,
and the women simply said, "Some of us must follow our
best-beloved."</p>
<p>The United States Sanitary Commission was soon organized,
for working in hospitals, looking after camps, and providing
comforts for the soldiers. Branch associations were formed in
ten large cities. The great Northwestern Branch was put under
the leadership of Mrs. Livermore and Mrs. A.H. Hoge. Useful
things began to pour in from all over the country,--fruits,
clothing, bedding, and all needed comforts for the army. Then
Mrs. Livermore, now a woman of forty, with great executive
ability, warm heart, courage, and perseverance, with a few
others, went to Washington to talk with President Lincoln.</p>
<p>"Can no women go to the front?" they asked.</p>
<p>"No civilian, either man or woman, is permitted by
<i>law</i>," said Mr. Lincoln. But the great heart of the
greatest man in America was superior to the law, and he placed
not a straw in their way. He was in favor of anything which
helped the men who fought and bled for their country.</p>
<p>Mrs. Livermore's first broad experience in the war was after
the battle of Fort Donelson. There were no hospitals for the
men, and the wounded were hauled down the hillside in
rough-board Tennessee wagons, most of them dying before they
reached St. Louis. Some poor fellows lay with the frozen earth
around them, chopped out after lying in the mud from Saturday
morning until Sunday evening.</p>
<p>One blue-eyed lad of nineteen, with both legs and both arms
shattered, when asked, "How did it happen that you were left so
long?" said, "Why, you see, they couldn't stop to bother with
us, <i>because they had to take the fort</i>. When they took
it, we forgot our sufferings, and all over the battle-field
cheers went up from the wounded, and even from the dying."</p>
<p>At the rear of the battle-fields the Sanitary Commission now
began to keep its wagons with hot soup and hot coffee, women,
fitly chosen, always joining in this work, in the midst of
danger. After the first repulse at Vicksburg, there was great
sickness and suffering. The Commission sent Mrs. Hoge, two
gentlemen accompanying her, with a boat-load of supplies for
the sick. One emaciated soldier, to whom she gave a little
package of white sugar, with a lemon, some green tea, two
herrings, two onions, and some pepper, said, "Is that
<i>all</i> for me?" She bowed assent. She says: "He covered his
pinched face with his thin hands and burst into a low, sobbing
cry. I laid my hand upon his shoulder, and said, 'Why do you
weep?' 'God bless the women!' he sobbed out. 'What should we do
but for them? I came from father's farm, where all knew plenty;
I've lain sick these three months; I've seen no woman's face,
nor heard her voice, nor felt her warm hand till to-day, and it
unmans me; but don't think I rue my bargain, for I don't. I've
suffered much and long, but don't let them know at home. Maybe
I'll never have a chance to tell them how much; but I'd go
through it all for the old flag.'"</p>
<p>Shortly after, accompanied by an officer, she went into the
rifle-pits. The heat was stifling, and the minie-balls were
whizzing. "Why, madam, where did you come from? Did you drop
from heaven into these rifle-pits? You are the first lady we
have seen here;" and then the voice was choked with tears.</p>
<p>"I have come from your friends at home, and bring messages
of love and honor. I have come to bring you the comforts we owe
you, and love to give. I've come to see if you receive what
they send you," she replied.</p>
<p>"Do they think as much of as as that? Why, boys, we can
fight another year on that, can't we?"</p>
<p>"Yes, yes!" they cried, and almost every hand was raised to
brush away the tears.</p>
<p>She made them a kindly talk, shook the hard, honest hands,
and said good-bye. "Madame," said the officer, "promise me that
you'll visit my regiment to-morrow; 'twould be worth a victory
to them. You don't know what good a lady's visit to the army
does. These men whom you have seen to-day will talk of your
visit for six months to come. Around the fires, in the
rifle-pits, in the dark night, or on the march, they will
repeat your words, describe your looks, voice, size, and dress;
and all agree in one respect,--that you look like an angel, and
exactly like each man's wife or mother. Ah! was there no work
for women to do?</p>
<p>The Sanitary and Christian Commissions expended about fifty
million dollars during the war, and of this, the women raised a
generous portion. Each battle cost the Sanitary Commission
about seventy-five thousand dollars, and the battle of
Gettysburg, a half million dollars. Mrs. Livermore was one of
the most efficient helpers in raising this money. She went
among the people, and solicited funds and supplies of every
kind.</p>
<p>One night it was arranged that she should speak in Dubuque,
Iowa, that the people of that State might hear directly from
their soldiers at the front. When she arrived, instead of
finding a few women as she had expected, a large church was
packed with both men and women, eager to listen. The governor
of the State and other officials were present. She had never
spoken in a mixed assembly. Her conservative training made her
shrink from it, and, unfortunately, made her feel incapable of
doing it.</p>
<p>"I cannot speak!" she said to the women who had asked her to
come.</p>
<p>Disappointed and disheartened, they finally arranged with a
prominent statesman to jot down the facts from her lips; and
then, as best he could, tell to the audience the experiences of
the woman who had been on battle-fields, amid the wounded and
dying. Just as they were about to go upon the platform, the
gentleman said, "Mrs. Livermore, I have heard you say at the
front, that you would give your all for the soldiers,--a foot,
a hand, or a voice. Now is the time to give your voice, if you
wish to do good."</p>
<p>She meditated a moment, and then she said, "I will try."</p>
<p>When she arose to speak, the sea of faces before her seemed
blurred. She was talking into blank darkness. She could not
even hear her own voice. But as she went on, and the needs of
the soldiers crowded upon her mind, she forgot all fear, and
for two hours held the audience spell-bound. Men and women
wept, and patriotism filled every heart. At eleven o'clock
eight thousand dollars were pledged, and then, at the
suggestion of the presiding officer, they remained until one
o'clock to perfect plans for a fair, from which they cleared
sixty thousand dollars. After this, Mrs. Livermore spoke in
hundreds of towns, helping to organize many of the more than
twelve thousand five hundred aid societies formed during
eighteen months.</p>
<p>As money became more and more needed, Mrs. Livermore decided
to try a sanitary commission fair in Chicago. The women said,
"We will raise twenty-five thousand dollars," but the men
laughed at such an impossibility. The farmers were visited, and
solicited to give vegetables and grain, while the cities were
not forgotten. Fourteen of Chicago's largest halls were hired.
The women had gone into debt ten thousand dollars, and the men
of the city began to think they were crazy. The Board of Trade
called upon them and advised that the fair be given up; the
debts should be paid, and the men would give the twenty-five
thousand, when, in their judgment, it was needed! The women
thanked them courteously, but pushed forward in the work.</p>
<p>It had been arranged that the farmers should come on the
opening day, in a procession, with their gifts of vegetables.
Of this plan the newspapers made great sport, calling it the
"potato procession." The day came. The school children had a
holiday, the bells were rung, one hundred guns were fired, and
the whole city gathered to see the "potato procession." Finally
it arrived,--great loads of cabbages, onions, and over four
thousand bushels of potatoes. The wagons each bore a motto,
draped in black, with the words, "We buried a son at Donelson,"
"Our father lies at Stone River," and other similar ones. The
flags on the horses' heads were bound with black; the women who
rode beside a husband or son, were dressed in deep mourning.
When the procession stopped before Mrs. Livermore's house, the
jeers were over, and the dense crowd wept like children.</p>
<p>Six of the public halls were filled with beautiful things
for sale, while eight were closed so that no other attractions
might compete with the fair. Instead of twenty-five thousand,
the women cleared one hundred thousand dollars.</p>
<p>Then Cincinnati followed with a fair, making two hundred and
twenty-five thousand; Boston, three hundred and eighty
thousand; New York, one million; and Philadelphia, two hundred
thousand more than New York. The women had found that there was
work enough for them to do.</p>
<p>Mrs. Livermore was finally ordered to make a tour of the
hospitals and military posts on the Mississippi River, and here
her aid was invaluable. It required a remarkable woman to
undertake such a work. At one point she found twenty-three men,
sick and wounded, whose regiments had left them, and who could
not be discharged because they had no descriptive lists. She
went at once to General Grant, and said, "General, if you will
give me authority to do so, I will agree to take these
twenty-three wounded men home."</p>
<p>The officials respected the noble woman, and the red tape of
army life was broken for her sake.</p>
<p>When the desolate company arrived in Chicago, on Saturday,
the last train had left which could have taken a Wisconsin
soldier home. She took him to the hotel, had a fire made for
him, and called a doctor.</p>
<p>"Pull him through till Monday, Doctor," she said, "and I'll
get him home." Then, to the lad, "You shall have a nurse, and
Monday morning I will go with you to your mother."</p>
<p>"Oh! don't go away," he pleaded; "I never shall see you
again."</p>
<p>"Well, then, I'll go home and see my family, and come back
in two hours. The door shall be left open, and I'll put this
bell beside you, so that the chambermaid will come when you
ring."</p>
<p>He consented, and Mrs. Livermore came back in two hours. The
soldier's face was turned toward the door, as though waiting
for her, but he was dead. He had gone home, but not to
Wisconsin.</p>
<p>After the close of the war, so eager were the people to hear
her, that she entered the lecture field and has for years held
the foremost place among women as a public speaker. She
lectures five nights a week, for five months, travelling
twenty-five thousand miles annually. Her fine voice, womanly,
dignified manner, and able thought have brought crowded houses
before her, year after year. She has earned money, and spent it
generously for others. The energy and conscientiousness of
little Mary Rice have borne their legitimate fruit.</p>
<p>Every year touching incidents came up concerning the war
days. Once, after she had spoken at Fabyan's American Institute
of Instruction, a military man, six feet tall, came up to her
and said, "Do you remember at Memphis coming over to the
officers' hospital?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Mrs. Livermore.</p>
<p>While the officers were paid salaries, very often the
paymasters could not find them when ill, and for months they
would not have a penny, not even receiving army rations. Mrs.
Livermore found many in great need, and carried them from the
Sanitary Commission blankets, medicine, and food. Milk was
greatly desired, and almost impossible to be obtained. One day
she came into the wards, and said that a certain portion of the
sick "could have two goblets of milk for every meal."</p>
<p>"Do you remember," said the tall man, who was then a major,
"that one man cried bitterly and said, 'I want two glasses of
milk,' and that you patted him on the head, as he lay on his
cot? And that the man said, as he thought of the dear ones at
home, whom he might not see again, 'Could you kiss me?' and the
noble woman bent down and kissed him? I am that man, and God
bless you for your kindness."</p>
<p>Mrs. Livermore wears on her third finger a plain gold ring
which has a touching history.</p>
<p>After lecturing recently at Albion, Mich., a woman came up,
who had driven eight miles, to thank her for a letter written
for John, her son, as he was dying in the hospital. The first
four lines were dictated by the dying soldier; then death came,
and Mrs. Livermore finished the message. The faded letter had
been kept for twenty years, and copies made of it. "Annie, my
son's wife," said the mother, "never got over John's death. She
kept about and worked, but the life had gone out of her. Eight
years ago she died. One day she said, 'Mother, if you ever find
Mrs. Livermore, or hear of her, I wish you would give her my
wedding ring, which has never been off my finger since John put
it there. Ask her to wear it for John's sake and mine, and tell
her this was my dying request.'"</p>
<p>With tears in the eyes of both giver and receiver, Mrs.
Livermore held out her hand, and the mother placed on the
finger this memento of two precious lives.</p>
<p>Mrs. Livermore has spent ten years in the temperance reform.
While she has shown the dreadful results of the liquor traffic,
she has been kind both in word and deed. Some time ago, passing
along a Boston street, she saw a man in the ditch, and a poor
woman bending over him.</p>
<p>"Who is he?" she asked of the woman.</p>
<p>"He's my husband, ma'am. He's a good man when he is sober,
and earns four dollars a day in the foundry. I keep a
saloon."</p>
<p>Mrs. Livermore called a hack. "Will you carry this man to
number ----?"</p>
<p>"No, madam, he's too dirty. I won't soil my carriage."</p>
<p>"Oh!" pleaded the wife, "I'll clean it all up for ye, if
ye'll take him," and pulling off her dress-skirt, she tried to
wrap it around her husband. Stepping to a saloon near by, Mrs.
Livermore asked the men to come out and help lift him. At first
they laughed, but were soon made ashamed, when they saw that a
lady was assisting. The drunken man was gotten upon his feet,
wrapped in his wife's clothing, put into the hack, and then
Mrs. Livermore and the wife got in beside him, and he was taken
home. The next day the good Samaritan called, and brought the
priest, from whom the man took the pledge. A changed family was
the result.</p>
<p>Her life is filled with thousands of acts of kindness, on
the cars, in poor homes, and in various charitable
institutions. She is the author of two or more books, <i>What
shall we do with Our Daughters?</i> and <i>Reminiscences of the
War</i>; but her especial power has been her eloquent words,
spoken all over the country, in pulpits, before colleges, in
city and country, from the Atlantic to the Pacific Coast. Like
Abraham Lincoln, who said, "I go for all sharing the privileges
of the government, who assist in bearing its burdens,--by no
means excluding women," she has advocated the enfranchisement
of her sex, along with her other work.</p>
<p>Now, past sixty, her active, earnest life, in contact with
the people, has kept her young in heart and in looks.</p>
<p>"A great authority on what constitutes beauty complains that
the majority of women acquire a dull, vacant expression towards
middle life, which makes them positively plain. He attributes
it to their neglect of all mental culture, their lives having
settled down to a monotonous routine of house-keeping,
visiting, gossip, and shopping. Their thoughts become
monotonous, too, for, though these things are all good enough
in their way, they are powerless to keep up any mental life or
any activity of thought."</p>
<p>Mrs. Livermore has been an inspiration to girls to make the
most of themselves and their opportunities. She has been an
ideal of womanhood, not only to "the boys" on the
battle-fields, but to tens of thousands who are fighting the
scarcely less heroic battles of every-day life. May it be many
years before she shall go out forever from her restful, happy
home, at Melrose, Mass.</p>
<p class="spacer">* * * * *</p>
<p>Mrs. Livermore died at her home, May 23, 1905, at 8 A.M., of
bronchitis. She was in her eighty-fourth year, and had survived
her husband six years. When her funeral services were held, the
schools of Melrose closed, business was suspended, bells were
tolled, and flags floated at half-mast. She was an active
member of thirty-seven clubs. The degree of Doctor of Laws was
conferred upon her, in 1896, by Tufts College.</p>
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