Dr. Mary Walker
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Only Woman Medal of Honor Holder Ahead of Her Time

 

 
By Rudi Williams
 


American Forces Press Service



 WASHINGTON – Whenever Ann Walker's brattish attitude emerged, 
 her grandmother would often say, "You're just like your great-
 aunt Mary."
 
 "When I was a teen-ager, I started to wonder, who is this great-
 aunt Mary?" said Walker, 74. "I sort of hungered for information 
 about her, but I couldn't find much. Nobody, including my 
 grandmother, seemed to care about her. She always said, 'Your 
 aunt was always dressing like a man.'"
 
 Her curiosity surged when one of her father's friends, a history 
 professor, told her about her distant relative, actually her 
 great-great-aunt, Dr. Mary Edwards Walker of the Civil War Union 
 Army. He told her Mary Walker was the first American woman to be 
 a military doctor, a prisoner of war and a Medal of Honor 
 recipient. She was also a Union spy and a crusader against 
 tobacco and alcohol.
 
 "He told me she was always imitating men, and if she had dressed 
 like a lady, she would have had a larger role in history," said 
 Walker, a resident of Washington's Georgetown Aged Women's Home. 
 A retired free-lance journalist, Walker said she's working on a 
 book, "Woman of Honor," to tell the story of her aunt's Civil 
 War exploits and her controversial life thereafter. 
 
 Through the family friend and research, Ann Walker learned her 
 aunt was born on Nov. 26, 1832, in Oswego County, N.Y., and 
 graduated from Syracuse Medical College in 1855. She married 
 fellow medical student Albert Miller, but declined to take his 
 name. The couple set up a medical practice in Rome, N.Y., but 
 the public wasn't ready to accept a woman physician. The 
 practice and the marriage foundered.
 
 When the Civil War started, the Union Army wouldn't hire women 
 doctors, so Walker volunteered as a nurse in Washington's Patent 
 Office Hospital and treated wounded soldiers at the Battle of 
 Bull Run in Virginia. In 1862, she received an Army contract 
 appointing her as an assistant surgeon with the 52nd Ohio 
 Infantry.
 
 The first woman doctor to serve with the Army Medical Corps, 
 Walker cared for sick and wounded troops in Tennessee at 
 Chickamauga and in Georgia during the Battle of Atlanta.
 
 Confederate troops captured her on April 10, 1864, and held her 
 until the sides exchanged prisoners of war on Aug. 12, 1864. 
 Walker worked the final months of the war at a women's prison in 
 Louisville, Ky., and later at an orphans' asylum in Tennessee.
 
 The Army nominated Walker for the Medal of Honor for her wartime 
 service. President Andrew Johnson signed the citation on Nov. 
 11, 1865, and she received the award on Jan. 24, 1866. Her 
 citation cites her wartime service, but not specifically valor 
 in combat.
 
 Walker's citation reads in part that she "devoted herself with 
 much patriotic zeal to the sick and wounded soldiers, both in 
 the field and hospitals, to the detriment of her own health. She 
 has also endured hardships as a prisoner of war for four months 
 in a Southern prison while acting as contract surgeon."
 
 The War Department, starting in 1916, reviewed all previous 
 Medal of Honor awards with the intent of undoing decades of 
 abuse. At the time, for instance, the medal could be freely 
 copied and sold and legally worn by anyone. Past awards would be 
 rescinded and future ones would be rejected if supporting 
 evidence didn't clearly, convincingly show combat valor above 
 and beyond the call of duty.
 
 Mary Walker and nearly 1,000 past recipients found their medals 
 revoked in the reform. Wearing the medal if unearned became a 
 crime. The Army demanded Walker and the others return their 
 medals. She refused and wore hers until her death at age 87 in 
 1919. 
 
 In the late 1960s, Ann Walker launched an intensive lobbying 
 campaign to restore her aunt's medal. A Nov. 25, 1974, letter 
 from the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee read, in part, "It's 
 clear your great-grandaunt was not only courageous during the 
 term she served as a contract doctor in the Union Army, but also 
 as an outspoken proponent of feminine rights. Both as a doctor 
 and feminist, she was much ahead of her time and, as is usual, 
 she was not regarded kindly by many of her contemporaries. Today 
 she appears prophetic." 
 
 President Jimmy Carter restored Mary Walker's Medal of Honor on 
 June 11, 1977. Today, it's on display in the Pentagon's women's 
 corridor.
 
 Walker said her relative was controversial on the battlefield 
 and in civilian life. During the war, she wore trousers under 
 her skirt, a man's uniform jacket and two pistols. As an early 
 women's rights advocate, particularly for dress reform, she was 
 arrested many times after the war for wearing men's clothes, 
 including wing collar, bow tie and top hat.
 
 The Women in Military Service to America Memorial at Arlington 
 (Va.) National Cemetery features the story of Dr. Mary E. Walker 
 along with a photograph of her and her walking cane. Curator 
 Judy Bellafaire called Walker "quite a character," and one whose 
 ideas made her seem eccentric in her own day and age.
 
 "But judging her from today's perspective, much of what she 
 spoke and wrote about, that people made fun of at the time, is 
 probably true today," Bellafaire said. Walker, she said, wrote 
 volumes about the evils of tobacco and alcohol and women's 
 clothes and authored two books: "Unmasked" and "Hit," a 
 fictionalized autobiography. 
 
 "My most favorite of her sayings is, 'Let the generations know 
 that women in uniform also guaranteed their freedom,'" Ann 
 Walker said. "She was strong. I wish I'd known her. It would 
 have been fun."
 
 

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