WEST SIDE SOLDIERS AID SOCIETY, INC.

Milwaukee / Hales Corners, Wisconsin

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NEWS & ANNOUNCEMENTS

West Side S.A.S. Meetings Resume on Monday, September 22, 2008
7 p.m., Wadsworth Library, Zablocki VA Medical Center

Tour the Soldiers Home in its earliest days with a slide show and commentary by Laura Rinaldi and excerpts from Elizabeth Corbett's Out at the Soldiers' Home  by editor Patricia Lynch. The meeting, the first of the 2008-2009 season, is free and open to the public.

Wadsworth Library (Building 3) is in the heart of the National Soldiers Home Historic District on the campus of the Clement J. Zablocki VA Medical Center, 5000 W. National Avenue, Milwaukee. For information, call 414-427-3776. Map of historic district.

Out at the Soldiers' Home Book Signings and Presentations
Visit BookTour  for a list of author/Society events for Out at the Soldiers' Home. The expanded edition of this Soldiers' Home classic is available from the West Side Soldiers Aid Society and amazon.com

New Proposal for Veteran Outreach in Historic District
Visit
www.dryhootch.org

Now in Print! Order your copy today!
OUT AT THE SOLDIERS' HOME
A Memory Book by Elizabeth Corbett
Expanded Edition

Elizabeth Corbett lived with her family at the Northwestern Branch of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Milwaukee, from 1891 to 1915—a total of twenty-five years. In an autobiographical sketch composed after she had moved to New York City to pursue her literary career, she wrote, “I suppose I’m the only author in America who was brought up in a Soldiers’ Home....As the only author who knows the ground, I shall some day have to write that book.”

Elizabeth published that book, Out at the Soldiers' Home,  in 1941. This expanded edition of her Soldiers' Home classic includes photographs of the Milwaukee Soldiers’ Home, a foreword by historian James Marten and a selection of Miss Corbett’s correspondence and short poems.

Excerpt:

The first thing which a visitor to the Grounds was likely to notice was how numerous the old soldiers were, and how hale and hearty they seemed.

There were indeed a good many of them. This particular Home was built to accommodate twenty-four hundred men, and it was usually full to capacity.

All the National Homes were under the same management and were run in essentially the same way. But Bebby’s Home was one of the most popular. Perhaps the sightliness had something to do with it; certainly the officer personnel counted heavily.

Now and then a familiar face would disappear for a season: old So-and-so had taken a transfer to some other Home, generally to the Tennessee or the California Branch, where the winters were so much milder. But after a few months he would reappear; and if Papa or the Governor encountered him about the Grounds and asked, “Back again, Joe?” the answer was almost sure to be, “Yes, sir. Back home.”

Their excellent physical condition was not hard to account for. They were of sturdy stock to begin with. In the Home they had substantial food, comfortable quarters, medical attention to their slightest ailments, and—most important of all—nothing to worry about. Entrance to the Home probably prolonged most of their lives a good many years.…

The second thing which a visitor to the Grounds regularly remarked on was that, although there might be hundreds of them in sight, each individual old soldier kept as much as possible to himself.

One would amble along a path, while another ambled five feet behind; but the second never caught up and the first never waited for him. When they assembled in the theater for a show they never occupied adjoining seats until all the singles were gone.… they made their avoidance of one another explicit: each man referred to the others collectively as “the old soldiers,” and somehow managed to feel himself an exception.

Sometimes a new member of the Home, hailing usually from a small-town G.A.R., would announce that he had come here “to be with the boys.” The “boys” made short work of that illusion.

— from Chapter Three: The Home Grounds

The wider availability of this resource will be welcomed by scholars of the Civil War era. But many others will also find value in Out at the Soldiers’ Home. It is nostalgic but never cloying, breezy but not glib, a reflection of an earlier time, but with modern sensibilities. It honors “those who have borne the battle” by providing a loving but honest look at their lives long after the battle was over.

—James Marten in the Foreword

Cover Image
256 pages, paperback, 52 photographs, $19.95
ISBN: 978-0-87946-363-2

HOW TO ORDER
Check Orders:

Send $19.95 per book
Plus $5.00 or 9% (whichever is greater) for Shipping and Handling to:
West Side Soldiers Aid Society, Inc.
5830 S. 92nd St.
Hales Corners, WI 53130

Credit Card Orders and Trade Orders:
ACTA Publications
acta@actapublications.com
800-397-2282

WEST SIDE SOLDIERS AID SOCIETY, INC., PUBLICATIONS

The Wisconsin Homefront: An Activity Book
$6.95 (plus shipping and handling)

National Home Bookmark
$1.00

National Home Postcard
$.50

1875 Lithograph

$15 (includes shipping and handling)

1889 Souvenir Book
$6 (includes shipping and handling)

General U.S. Grant Window Postcard
$.50

To order
Send your request with check to:
West Side Soldiers Aid Society, Inc.
5830 S. 92nd St.
Hales Corners, WI 53130-2219 

July/August 2008 newsletter is now available!
Request an introductory copy by sending an email with "Newsletter" in the subject field to info@wssas.org

 

 

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