Kate Cummings was a lady born in Edinburgh, Scotland but traveled with her family to the United States. Kate’s family settled and lived in the southern United States prior to the beginning of the American Civil War.

When the Civil War broke out, Kate’s mother and two sisters left for England while Kate, her father and brother stayed behind back in the South.
Against Kate’s family’s wishes, she signed up to become a nurse volunteer inside of a Confederate hospital located near where the Battle of Shiloh took place. Her brother enlisted as a soldier in the 21st Alabama Infantry.
Kate was inspired to join the cause of the Civil War by Reverend Benjamin M. Miller and Florence Nightingale who had called on all women to help aid the Confederacy.
Kate was a active nurse throughout the Civil War and she eventually became the head of the food and housekeeping departments in several Confederate hospitals inside the state of Georgia.
The Confederacy did not have an actual organized medical forces. This made nurses like Kate extremely crucial for the Confederacy’s survival.
Kate went on to write about her experiences during the war in her diary A Journal of Hospital Life in the Confederate Army which was published in 1866. Kate stated “I could fill whole people with descriptions of the scenes I had”.
Kate played an important role for not only Georgia during the Civil War but for the entire Confederacy as well. She was also an active member in the United Daughters of the Confederacy.



