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1 | HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, Mary Ann Bickerdyke also known as Mother | ||||||
3 | Bickerdyke was born July 19,
1817, in Knox County, Ohio; she | ||||||
4 | attended Oberlin College and later received training as a nurse | ||||||
5 | in a Cincinnati hospital where she worked for several years; | ||||||
6 | and
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7 | WHEREAS, In 1847, she married Robert Bickerdyke and 9 years | ||||||
8 | later, with their 2
small sons, the couple moved to Galesburg, | ||||||
9 | Illinois; Robert Bickerdyke died shortly
afterward; and
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10 | WHEREAS, During the Civil War, Mother Bickerdyke | ||||||
11 | volunteered her considerable
medical skills to help the | ||||||
12 | hundreds of men who were dying, not from battle, but from
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13 | typhoid, dysentery, and other diseases; she helped establish | ||||||
14 | the hospital in Cairo, Illinois;
and | ||||||
15 | WHEREAS, Throughout the war she continued to perform | ||||||
16 | valuable service for the Union
Army; traveling with the Army of | ||||||
17 | Tennessee, she was present at 19 battles, including
Shiloh and | ||||||
18 | Sherman's March to the Sea; during this time, she worked not | ||||||
19 | only as a nurse,
but she also set up dietary kitchens and | ||||||
20 | established laundry services, all the while she
continued her | ||||||
21 | fight to improve Army life for the enlisted men; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, Mother Bickerdyke once argued with General | ||||||
2 | William T. Sherman, refusing to leave the battlefield until he | ||||||
3 | turned to another officer and exclaimed "She outranks me. I | ||||||
4 | can't do a thing in the world.", and by the end of the war she | ||||||
5 | had helped provide 300 hospitals for the wounded and sick; and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, Mother Bickerdyke was so greatly admired by | ||||||
7 | General William Sherman,
that he asked her to ride beside him | ||||||
8 | as soldiers marched through Washington, D.C. after
the war had | ||||||
9 | ended; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, After the war, she worked for the Salvation Army | ||||||
11 | in San Francisco; she
became an attorney dedicated to helping | ||||||
12 | Civil War veterans with legal issues; she died
peacefully on | ||||||
13 | November 8, 1901; and
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14 | WHEREAS, A statue of her was erected in Galesburg and a | ||||||
15 | hospital boat and a liberty ship, the SS Mary Bickerdyke, were | ||||||
16 | named in her honor; and
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17 | WHEREAS, Mother Mary Ann Bickerdyke represents the | ||||||
18 | sacrifices and contributions
made by military and civilian | ||||||
19 | nurses throughout the United States; therefore, be it
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20 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
21 | NINETY-EIGHTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, THE |
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1 | SENATE CONCURRING HEREIN, that the
Wednesday in May during | ||||||
2 | Illinois Nurses week be designated as Mother Mary Ann
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3 | Bickerdyke Day to honor the contributions of Mother Bickerdyke, | ||||||
4 | military nurses, and all
nurses in the State of Illinois; and | ||||||
5 | be it further
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6 | RESOLVED, That we urge the citizens of this State to take | ||||||
7 | cognizance of this event and
to participate fittingly in its | ||||||
8 | observance; and be it further
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9 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
10 | presented to the Illinois Nurses Association as an expression | ||||||
11 | of our esteem and respect.
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