$ 64.00
Shortly after the outbreak of the American Civil War, Clara Barton’s Ladies’ Aid Society began collecting and distributing medical supplies to the Union soldiers despite opposition from the War Department. However, in 1862 Barton gained permission to work on the front lines. She distributed stores, cleaned field hospitals, and applied dressings after several horrific battles including Antietam, Fredericksburg, and Cold Harbor. In 1864, she was appointed “lady in charge” of the hospitals for the Army of the James by Union General Benjamin Butler. Postwar she ran the Office of Missing Soldiers, whose purpose was to find or identify soldiers killed or missing in action. Barton was introduced to the Red Cross on a trip to Geneva, Switzerland, and would found the American Red Cross upon her return.
$ 120.00
PREORDER ONLY! DUE TO ARRIVE IN FEBRUARY Union General U.S. Grant Mounted Ulysses S. Grant has been widely acclaimed by both his contemporaries and historians as an exceptional horseman....
$ 120.00
IN STOCK! NEW! General George Washington Mounted, 1775-80 Congress created the Continental Army on 14 June 1775. Washington was chosen to become its commander-in-chief because of his military experience and the belief...
$ 48.00
IN STOCK! NEW! British 43rd Regiment of Foot, Standing Firing, 1780 According to The Manual Exercise, As Ordered by His Majesty, in 1764 by Hugh Gaine, 1775, the British manual of arms...
$ 48.00
IN STOCK! NEW! British 43rd Regiment of Foot Defending, 1870 This soldier takes up a defensive position. His bayonet is affixed and at the ready, and although rarely used in...