"Healing the Wounds of War: The Brooklyn Sanitary Fair of 1864" Exhibition

Brooklyn Museum

poster for "Healing the Wounds of War: The Brooklyn Sanitary Fair of 1864" Exhibition

This event has ended.

This exhibition presents a selection of artworks and historical objects celebrating the contributions of women to the mid-nineteenth-century Sanitary Movement, particularly the highly important Brooklyn and Long Island Sanitary Fair of 1864. The genesis of the exhibition was a rare doll from the Museum’s collection featuring an elaborate trousseau made by a woman named Eliza Lefferts and sold at the Brooklyn Sanitary Fair. During the Civil War, sanitary fairs were held to raise money for the war effort in major cities in the Northeast. These large-scale fairs were social events that combined entertainment, education, and philanthropy. Although the U.S. Sanitary Commission was headed by men, most of its work was accomplished by thousands of women volunteers. In Brooklyn, civic-minded women’s organizations orchestrated the hugely successful Brooklyn Sanitary Fair, a separate event from the New York Sanitary Fair. It raised $400,000, well over the projected $100,000 and equal to more than four million dollars by today’s standards. The money was used for clothing, food, medical supplies, and other provisions for the Union Army. In addition to Eliza Lefferts's doll, the exhibition includes engravings by Winslow Homer depicting women during wartime and a rare autograph book compiled by prominent Brooklynite Gertrude Lefferts Vanderbilt, on loan from the Brooklyn Historical Society.

[Image: "Doll and Wardrobe, Sanitary Fair" United States, (circa 1864), Mixed media, doll approx. 12 in. ]

Media

Schedule

from January 29, 2010 to October 17, 2010

Artist(s)

Eliza Lefferts, Winslow Homer et al.

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