Lizzie Aiken Explained

Lizzie Aiken
Birth Name:Eliza N. Atherton
Birth Date:24 March 1817
Birth Place:Auburn, New York, US
Death Place:Chicago, Illinois, US
Burial Place:Graceland Cemetery
Other Names:Lizzie Atherton, Aunt Lizzie
Occupation:Nurse
Spouse:Cyrus Aiken

Lizzie Aiken (1817 - 1906) was a nurse in the American Civil War, who was widely known as "Aunt Lizzie".[1]

Early life and family

Eliza Atherton,[2] known as "Lizzie", was born in the town of Auburn, New York in 1817. The daughter of Steadman Atherton (1791-1856) and Deborah Ward. Both her parents were from Cavendish, Vermont.

In 1826, at the age of nine, the family returned to the Atherton Farmstead in Cavendish, which was owned by her grandfather, Jonathan Atherton.[3]

When she was sixteen, her mother became ill and Lizzie spent the next four years caring for her. Once her mother's health improved, she enrolled in the New England Academy in Cavendish.

Personal life

In 1837, ages 20, she married Cyrus Aiken, nine years her senior, and they honeymooned in Boston.

Choosing to relocate to Grand Detour, Illinois, the journey would have involved travel by stage coach, navigating the Erie Canal and boarding a series of sailing vessels through the Great Lakes, first to Detroit, and onto Chicago, where they remained for a short time, until reaching the Rock River area of Illinois. This journey westwards involved much hardship, suffering and discomfort, particularly with the loss of her follow on shipment of personal heirlooms she had inherited from her grandmother, which sank to the bottom of Lake Erie.

She raised a young family, in a colony of other emigres from Vermont, including the blacksmith John Deere.[4] A series of misfortunes occurred with an outbreak of Cholera, resulting in the loss of all four of her young boys in 1852.[5] Her brother Ward and sister Roxy arrived to console her. Within eleven days her sister had succumbed to cholera.

Her father died in 1856. When her husband became mentally ill, she worked as a domestic nurse to help defray his medical expenses and help support her mother, who was living in Vermont. She also lost possession of their homestead.[6] A while later her new home was destroyed after being struck by lightning.

Aiken was a deeply religious person and was an active member of her local baptist congregation.

Civil War service

Aiken, now a widow, enlisted as a nurse with the 6th Illinois Cavalry Regiment[7] at the beginning of the American Civil War. Serving under Austrian born, Dr John N. Niglas, she nursed soldiers in the sick tents near Peoria, Illinois.[8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13]

In November 1861, she accompanied the 6th Illinois Cavalry to Shawnee Town, on the Ohio River. Her comfort and care resulted in the nickname "Aunt Lizzie". At first she worked for no pay but eventually received $12 per month from the Union Army.

In 1862, she wrote to a friend:

In January 1862, she wrote to another friend[14] as follows:

She would later care for Union soldiers at Ovington Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. She was friends with Mary A. "Mother" Sturges.[15]

In 1864, the ladies of the Peoria Loyal League raised the money so she could visit her mother in Cavendish for three weeks.

Aiken became sick and returned to Peoria where she was nursed back to health. In 1867, she joined the Second Baptist Church and worked as missionary until her death in 1906.

Honors and tributes

She was personally known to every U.S. president from Abraham Lincoln (16th President), through to Grover Cleveland (who served as the 22nd President). Some biographers have referred to Aiken as America's own "Florence Nightingale".

Aiken was an honored guest and speaker at the many Grand Army of the Republic events she attended.[16]

Aiken died on January 17, 1906, aged 88. A funeral service was held at the Second Baptist Church in Chicago on January 20, 1906. The casket was draped in the American flag. In attendance were several well known ministers, judges and merchants. Of particular note were the tributes from pastor John Roach Straton, Reverend Galusha Anderson and other ministers and her nephew Frank S. Atherton. At the end of the service, Members of the Grand Army of the Republic escorted the hearse to her place of rest at Graceland Cemetery in Chicago. Some sources incorrectly state that she was laid to rest at Rosehill Cemetery.[17]

A number of newspapers paid homage to her. The following tribute from 1906 is from the Christian Herald:

Ancestry

Her family came from Cavendish, Vermont. The Atherton family ancestry is from Lancashire, England. Her ancestral home, the Atherton Farmstead, is a historic farm located at 31 Greenbush Road in Cavendish, Vermont. Built in 1785, it is one of the oldest in the rural community, and is its oldest known surviving tavern house. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.

Her maternal grandfather was John Ward who was related to General Artemas Ward, a leader of the American Revolution.

Portrayals on TV

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Memorial Aunt Lizzie Aiken: With Sketch of Her Life, Funeral Service, tributes and resolutions. Frank S. . Atherton. 1906.
  2. Web site: Eliza Atherton entry on the Atherton One Name Study.
  3. Web site: Women in American History. September 22, 2006 .
  4. Web site: Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the, Volume 110, Part 9. United States Congress. 1964.
  5. Web site: Illinois Review - Article on Lizzie. 2014.
  6. Web site: The Story of Aunt Lizzie Aiken. Mary Eleanor Roberts Anderson, pen name 'Mrs Galusha Anderson'. 1880.
  7. Web site: Civil War Archive.
  8. Web site: Aunt Lizzie Civil War.
  9. Book: Memorial to Aunt Lizzie. 1906.
  10. Web site: Aunt Lizzie Aiken Portrait.
  11. Web site: Civil War.
  12. Web site: Vermont in the Civil War - Aunt Lizzie a Vermont girl who became a Civil War Nurse.
  13. Web site: Illinois Review - Lizzie Aitken.
  14. Web site: Auntie Lizzie Aiken from Peoria Public Library.
  15. Web site: Portrait of Mary A. Mother Sturges.
  16. Web site: Peoria Historical Society Records on Aunt Lizzie.
  17. Web site: Memorial, Aunt Lizzie Aiken: With Sketch of Her Life, Funeral Service. 1906.
  18. Web site: PBS Production: Mercy Street. .