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Nancy Maria <I>Young</I> Abbey

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Nancy Maria Young Abbey Veteran

Birth
Geneva, Ontario County, New York, USA
Death
13 Apr 1903 (aged 86)
Burial
Warwick, Orange County, New York, USA Add to Map
Plot
Pulteney-in-Glenwood
Memorial ID
View Source
From the book published in 1916 "Abbe -Abbey Genealogy In Memory of John Abbe and his Descendants" by Cleveland Abbe and Joseph Genung Nichols

HORATIO GATES ABBEY, son of David and Nancy (Farnham) Abbey, born April 12, 1818, at Olive, Ulster County, N. Y.; died in New York City, September 27, 1879.

Married (1) in Geneva, NY June 1, 1840, NANCY MARIA YOUNG, born in Geneva, December 17, 1816, daughter of Aaron and Electa (Doty) Young.

Children by first wife
1 - Charles Augustus Abbey, b. April 28, 1841
2 - Lyman Cobb Abbey, b. Oct. 18, 1845
3 - William Chester Abbey, b. Jan. 5, 1850Maria N. Abbey (nee Young, December 17, 1816 - April 13, 1903, was a nurse during the American Civil War.

The daughter of Aaron Young, Maria N. Abbey was born and educated in Geneva, New York. She and her husband moved to Brooklyn, New York, in 1845.

In Mary G. Holland's collection of letters from Civil War nurses, titled, Our Army Nurses: Stories from Women in the Civil War, Abbey recounts her experience as a wartime nurse. She was called to the service after hearing Reverend H. W. Beecher speak at Plymouth church of the duty of women to help during the war. She heard this sermon in April 1861, the Sunday after the battle at Fort Sumter, and enlisted with six other women by the first day of May. These women were some of the first to respond to the call for nurses.

Her service began at Union Hospital at Georgetown. Immediately, Abbey noticed the lack of structure and organization of the hospital, largely due to the immense need for help. Ultimately, the hospital environment proved to be too much physical and emotional stress for Abbey, who left September 3, 1861.

This did not stop Abbey from aiding the war effort. Abbey opened her own home to be used as a private hospital for two years, maintained by herself. The house continued to operate as a hospital even after Abbey moved. She reportedly never expected payment for her services.

In her later years, Abbey was chaplain for the Ladies' Relief Corps, an auxiliary to the McPherson-Doane Post of the Grand Army of the Republic.

Activities in Abbey's personal life included singing in church choirs.

Abbey died in Brooklyn on April 13, 1903, and was buried in Buffalo, New York.

Contributor: Kathy Jo O'Neal (51151765)
From the book published in 1916 "Abbe -Abbey Genealogy In Memory of John Abbe and his Descendants" by Cleveland Abbe and Joseph Genung Nichols

HORATIO GATES ABBEY, son of David and Nancy (Farnham) Abbey, born April 12, 1818, at Olive, Ulster County, N. Y.; died in New York City, September 27, 1879.

Married (1) in Geneva, NY June 1, 1840, NANCY MARIA YOUNG, born in Geneva, December 17, 1816, daughter of Aaron and Electa (Doty) Young.

Children by first wife
1 - Charles Augustus Abbey, b. April 28, 1841
2 - Lyman Cobb Abbey, b. Oct. 18, 1845
3 - William Chester Abbey, b. Jan. 5, 1850Maria N. Abbey (nee Young, December 17, 1816 - April 13, 1903, was a nurse during the American Civil War.

The daughter of Aaron Young, Maria N. Abbey was born and educated in Geneva, New York. She and her husband moved to Brooklyn, New York, in 1845.

In Mary G. Holland's collection of letters from Civil War nurses, titled, Our Army Nurses: Stories from Women in the Civil War, Abbey recounts her experience as a wartime nurse. She was called to the service after hearing Reverend H. W. Beecher speak at Plymouth church of the duty of women to help during the war. She heard this sermon in April 1861, the Sunday after the battle at Fort Sumter, and enlisted with six other women by the first day of May. These women were some of the first to respond to the call for nurses.

Her service began at Union Hospital at Georgetown. Immediately, Abbey noticed the lack of structure and organization of the hospital, largely due to the immense need for help. Ultimately, the hospital environment proved to be too much physical and emotional stress for Abbey, who left September 3, 1861.

This did not stop Abbey from aiding the war effort. Abbey opened her own home to be used as a private hospital for two years, maintained by herself. The house continued to operate as a hospital even after Abbey moved. She reportedly never expected payment for her services.

In her later years, Abbey was chaplain for the Ladies' Relief Corps, an auxiliary to the McPherson-Doane Post of the Grand Army of the Republic.

Activities in Abbey's personal life included singing in church choirs.

Abbey died in Brooklyn on April 13, 1903, and was buried in Buffalo, New York.

Contributor: Kathy Jo O'Neal (51151765)

Inscription

In Memory of her services as Army nurse, 1861-1865



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