How Did Celia Barton Contribute To Red Cross

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Clara Barton dedicated her adult life to helping those in need. She began her work in 1861 helping the men in uniform who were injured. But it did not end there. She worked tirelessly on the “Search for the Missing Men” (Wikipedia). Her bravery and virtue guided her ambition and desire to help those around her in the civil war and with the American Red Cross association. In 1861, Clara Barton was working in the Washington D.C. station when soldiers flooded the station wounded and hungry after the Baltimore riot. Clara saw a situation in need of her help. She provided them with the necessary care and had several others supply clothes and emotional support. She learned to store and administer the proper medical care. But Clara did not only offer …show more content…

(American Red Cross). Her leadership abilities were so greatly recognized that the Red Cross established the American Red Cross. As soon as she could, she began working. She soon became acquainted with Susan B. Anthony and Frederick Douglas and began a long association with the Women’s Suffrage and Civil Right’s Movement (Wikipedia). Soon, she was widely known. In 1871, German authorities and Strasbourg Comite De Secours requested her to superintend the supply of jobs to the poor after the siege of paris (Wikipedia). At the end of the war, for recognition of all of her hard work, she received honorable decorations if golden cross of baden and the Prussian iron cross. In 1889, days after the Johnstown flood, Barton led 50 doctors and nurses to respond to the disaster. Then in 1887, she responded to the humanitarian crisis in the Ottoman Empire in the aftermath of the Hamidian Massacres. Not long after, she sailed the Constantinople to establish the first American International Red Cross headquarters in the heart of Turkey. She spent her adult life traveling and volunteering her help as best she could with no time to rest. In the spring of 1896, Barton traveled along five other Red Cross expeditions administering relief and humanitarian aid. She traveled to Cuba and worked in hospitals at the age of 77 (Wikipedia). In 1900 Clara worked in her last field operation helping victims of the Galveston hurricane. She worked to re-establish life for people there and built orphanages. After all the beneficial aspects she had brought to the Red Cross Association, Barton was forced to resign at the age of 83 due to criticism about her mixing professional and personal resources and because of her egocentric leadership style fitting poorly into the formal structure of the organizational charity (Wikipedia). Her replacements were new, all male, scientific