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r brave color-bearer? Who but the resolute Kady Brownell! Over the marshland and over the highland,ttle Rhode Island,— She, the intrepid one, Kady Brownell! While the mad rout at Manassas was surginard onward was urging, Who so undaunted as Kady Brownell! When gallant Burnside made dash upon Newbmarking, Forward, straight forward, strode Kady Brownell. Reaching the lines where the army was forment swarming, What did she see there-this Kady Brownell? ‘Gallant Burnside’: at the height of opposing Confederates. Under his command, Kady Brownell showed herself ‘so undaunted’; the two Rho would no men? Nay, but this woman would,--Kady Brownell! Waving her banner she raced for the cleara volley of cheering— Greeted the heroine, Kady Brownell! Gone (and thank God!) are those red days 's Daughter!— Just one more cheer for her, Kady Brownell! Clinton Scollard. Sheridan's ride ion that might have proved serious but for Kady Brownell. The brigade marched on out of the woods,[1
gh rebel territory returns after the wounded, but is overtaken by the rebels while bringing then off and plundered of her ambulance horses others soon after provided Accompanies a regiment of the regular army to the plains after the war Mrs. Kady Brownell her skill as a sharp-shooter, and in sword exercise color Bearer in the Fifth Rhode Island Infantry a skillful nurse her husband wounded discharged from the army in 1863 The number of women who actually bore arms in the war, or who,ce she returned with them to Michigan, but the attractions of army life were too strong to be overcome, and she has since joined one of the regiments of the regular army stationed on the plains in the neighborhood of the Rocky Mountains. Mrs. Kady Brownell, the wife of an Orderly Sergeant of the First and afterwards of the Fifth Rhode Island Infantry, who, like Madame Turchin was born in the camp, and was the daughter of a Scottish soldier of the British army, was another of these half-soldie
L. P. Brockett, Women's work in the civil war: a record of heroism, patriotism and patience, Index of names of women whose services are recorded in this book. (search)
, Miss Susan J., 408. Bellows, Mrs. H. W., 302. Bennett, Miss, 89. Bennison, Mrs. R. H., 409. Bickerdyke, Mrs. Mary A., 48, 163, 165-170, 172-186, 209. Bissell, Miss Lucy J., 406. Booth, Mrs., 78. Bradford, Miss Charlotte, 153, 301, 316. Bradley, Miss Amy M., 212-224, 301, 316. Brayton, Miss Mary Clark, 48, 53. Breckinridge, Miss Margaret E., 48, 62, 88, 187, 199. Brendell, Mrs. E. C., 408. Brimmer, Mrs. Martin, 411. Broadhead, Mrs. Bettie, 409. Brooks, Mrs. Maria, 408. Brownell, Mrs. Kady, 82, 83. Bryden, Mrs., 89. Bucklin, Miss Sophronia, 409. Caldwell, Mrs., 410. Campbell, Mrs. John, 408. Campbell, Mrs. Lucy L., 408. Campbell, Miss Valeria, 53. Cary, Miss Mary, 405. Chapman, Mrs., 354. Clapp, Mrs. Anna L., 53, 76, 88. Clark, Mrs. A. M., 408. Clark, Miss Eudora, 406. Clark, Mrs. Lincoln, 165. Colfax, Mrs. Harriet R., 48, 395-399. Collins, Miss Ellen, 53. Colt, Mrs. Henrietta L., 53. Conrad, Mrs. R. E., 377. Coolidge, Mrs. C. P., 409. Comstock, M