Ella King Newsom | |
---|---|
Born | 1838 Brandon, Mississippi |
Died | January 18, 1919 |
Nationality (legal) | American [1] |
Occupation | Nurse |
Ella King Newsom (1833–1919; also known as Ella King Newsome) was a nurse for the Confederacy in the American Civil War. [2] [3] She earned the nickname of the "Florence Nightingale of the South." [3] [4] Newsom served as he matron of Chattanooga's Academy Hospital, working on the front in Tennessee from 1861–1862. [5] [3] Newsom also served at the Corinth House Hotel Hospital with Kate Cumming. [6] [7]
Ella King Newsom was born in Brandon, Mississippi, in 1838 to Julia and Thomas S. N. King. [1] [8] Her father—T.S.King—was a Baptist minister; she was the second of seven children. [2] [8] The family, soon after Ella King's birth, moved to Arkansas, where she spent most of her young life. [2] In 1854, King married Dr. Frank Newsom from Tennessee, a wealthy physician and planter. [2] [1] After his death a few years later, Newsom inherited his estate. [1] Newsom, her younger sisters, and other young women lived in a house together in Tennessee while attending Mary Sharp College. [2]
Newson's war experience began with her buying supplies with her own money and assisting the Southern Mothers' Home Hospital and the Overton Hospital. [2] Following where the need for help was, Newsom soon relocated to Kentucky, working grueling hours to make up for the need. [2] Newsom's work continued to move her around the south, eventually earning her a position as a matron for the Foard Hospital in Chattanooga, Tennessee. [2] Newsom continued working in numerous locations until the end of the war. [2] [9]
Newsom spent the entirety of her wealth during the war on supplies and supporting the medical effort. [2] She remarried to Confederate veteran Colonel W.H. Trader in 1867. [2] The two had one surviving child, Mary. [2] Newsom died of an illness on January 18, 1919. [2]