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Sarah S. Sampson

1832-1907

Nurse, 3rd Maine Volunteer Infantry
Agent, Maine State Soldier's Relief Agency


This redoubtable lady came to Washington, D.C. to be near her husband, Lieutenant Colonel Charles A.W. Sampson of the 3rd Maine. She occupied her time first by visiting wounded Maine boys in Washington hospitals, but soon was venturing far afield, bringing supplies, food and medicines to troops on the James River. She was often in some danger. On one occasion, she was on board the Steamer Molly Baker and while writing to the Adjutant General, interrupted herself to tell him: "We are going down under guard of the gun-boat Galena as the Steamer which came up this morning was fired into by rebel batteries. There is considerable excitement on board." She went on with her letter, but included, with her customary aplomb, this postscript: "Later - I am told by the Capt. we have been fired at by quite a number of guns but as yet none has struck us."

In July 1862, Lt. Colonel Sampson had resigned due to ill health and Sarah accompanied him home to Bath, Maine. but not for long. By September she was back in Washington, this time as a salaried worker for the Maine Soldier's Relief Agency, which was headquartered on F. Street.

She spent the rest of the war bringing supplies, medicine, food and other necessities gathered by the Agency to Maine troops in field hospitals. Her long account of dealing with the wounded from The Wilderness who were brought in to the hostile city of Fredericksburg is harrowing.

After the war she returned to Maine where she founded and served as first Matron of the Bath Military and Naval Children's Home - an orphanage for the children of Civil War veterans.

She eventually gravitated back to Washington where she worked in the U.S. Pension Office.

If you know where to look, you'll find a monument raised in her memory in Arlington National Cemetery! Here is one of her reports from Gettysburg.

Here is a transcript of one of her reports about Gettysburg. We tried to scan in the original document, but her handwriting is so fine, it just wasn't readable.

Maine Soldiers Relief Association. 973 F Street, Washington, D.C.
September 15th, 1863

Gov. Coburn
Dear Sir: I am rather late in sending you this list of "soldiers in our hospitals the first of the month" but have done so with as little delay as possible, as it seemed necessary for me to attend to other duties while obtaining the Report. My daily mail has been so heavy since the Battle at Gettysburg that I have not been able to make the copies myself.

I spent four weeks with our wounded at Gettysburg and returned to Washington only reluctantly though there were others here who had a claim on my attention. From frequent letters in reference to some of our soldiers who are still unable to be moved from Gettysburg, I am thinking to go on again for a short time, in a few days. The agent from New Hampshire has returned and reports that the boards that mark the graves of our soldiers, are many of them displaced by the heavy rains , etc. and need attention. He had carefully replaced all those from his State. I shall be glad when all the members of our association return so that a meeting may be called to make these & other arrangements. I shall visit all the burial grounds & report while I am there.

There is a vacancy at Fairfax Seminary Hospital for Miss Owen of whom you wrote if she desires it.

Very Repectfully &c.
Mrs. Charles A.L. Sampson

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