The War Between the States began in 1861. To meet the spiritual needs of Federal soldiers facing death, the Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) established the United States Christian Commission on November 14, 1861.
The Commission distributed thousands of New Testaments and prayer books to Union soldiers. They gave tracts and pamphlets. They operated portable libraries for the men. The organization also furnished free envelopes with their stamp and “Soldier’s letter” in one corner.
Commission workers were not paid. More than 5,000 gave freely of their time to serve as field volunteers to aid the chaplains ministering to soldiers. Citizens stitched clothes, raised money, and put kits together for Northern and Southern soldiers.
The Commission raised $3,000,000. Commission delegates requested donations of supplies.
Christian Commission workers provided medical supplies to field hospitals and were at Gettysburg after the battle.
The Ladies Christian Commission started in 1864. Louisa May Alcott, author of Little Women, was one of these workers. Georgia McClellan also served on this commission. Georgia’s sister, Jenny Wade, had been killed during the Battle of Gettysburg.
-Sandra Merville Hart
Sources
Billings, John D. Hard Tack and Coffee, George M. Smith & Co., 1887.
“Civil War Christian Commission Was Formed,” Christianity.com, 2017/07/04 http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1801-1900/civil-war-christian-commission-was-formed-11630528.html.
Davis, William C. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Civil War: The Soldiers, Generals, Weapons, and Battles, The Lyons Press, 2001.
“United States Christian Commission,” Wikipedia, 2017/07/04 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Christian_Commission.

Thanks so much for this interesting post – didn’t know Louisa May Alcott had been so extensively involved in this way 🙂
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Louisa May Alcott not only served as a volunteer nurse–she wrote about it! I enjoyed reading her book, Civil War Hospital Sketches, about her time as a nurse. Thanks for commenting!
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That was a really insightful book, Hospital Sketches! 🙂 I quite enjoyed that too.
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