A remarkable Civil War memoir from inside the hospitals of Confederate Richmond.
First published in 1879,
A Southern Woman’s Story is
Phoebe Yates Pember’s unforgettable firsthand account of caring for the sick and wounded during the American Civil War. As a hospital matron in Richmond, she witnessed the conflict not from the battlefield, but from the wards, kitchens, corridors, and improvised rooms where men fought for life after the guns had fallen silent.
Pember writes with unusual force, intelligence, and candor. Her memoir captures the daily realities of wartime hospital life: food shortages, exhaustion, medical routines, petty rivalries, black-market temptations, bureaucratic disorder, and the emotional burden of tending the dying. At the same time, she records moments of humor, resilience, tenderness, and unexpected grace.
More than a medical or military document, this is also an important work of women’s history. Pember offers a rare female perspective on the Confederate home front and on the immense, often overlooked labor performed by women during the war. Her pages preserve voices that formal histories often leave out: wounded privates, nurses, ward-masters, families waiting at home, and the civilians living through Richmond’s final unraveling.
For readers of Civil War history, women’s memoirs, medical history, and firsthand historical narratives, A Southern Woman’s Story remains an essential and deeply human document of nineteenth-century America.
Perfect for readers interested in:
- Civil War memoirs
- Women in the American Civil War
- Confederate Richmond
- Military hospitals and nursing history
- Firsthand accounts of 19th-century America