Lucy Fenman Barron

[1] She enlisted in the 111th Pennsylvania Infantry, and spent the first two months of her service at Camp Reed in Erie.

[1][2] According to Barron, some of the places she served looked more like houses than hospitals.

[1] She even spent some time under Confederate occupation, though she enlisted with the Union.

[2] One of the moments Barron shares in Mary G. Holland's book of letters is preserving a soldier's life until he could be baptized, only to die minutes later.

[2] This article about a person of the American Civil War is a stub.