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Reenactor’s Missions for Jesus Christ (R.M.J.C.)
Reverend Alan Farley
& Family
The Reenactor’s Missions for Jesus Christ is a Christian
outreach ministry to the Civil War re-enacting / living history
community and is the full-time vocation of Rev. Alan Farley.
Chaplain Farley and his family are missionaries of the Timberlake
Baptist Church of Lynchburg, VA.
Join Reverend Farley for Sunday Services
on
June 6th at 10:30 am
near the Pennypacker mansion.
U.S. Christian Commission
History
The United States Christian Commission, a project of the
Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA), sent almost five
thousand volunteers to the battlefields and military hospitals
of the Civil War. Their purpose was to care for the spiritual
and physical needs of Union soldiers, which included rescue
and transportation of the wounded, nursing, and pastoral duties.
Nashville, where as many as fifty volunteers worked under
the supervision of agent Edward P. Smith and his wife Hannah
during the campaigns of the Army of the Cumberland, became
a major center for Christian Commission activities. Volunteers
provided first aid and loaded the injured on boxcars following
the battle of Franklin and searched for wounded men after
the battle of Nashville. At Chickamauga, one agent was captured
and sent to Libby Prison in Richmond. Commission volunteers
also helped with the wounded at Fort Donelson, Shiloh, Murfreesboro,
Cleveland, and Chattanooga.
In Nashville the volunteers served as nurses and chaplains
in military hospitals, but also made two unique contributions:
the Special Diet Kitchen Service and the Lending Library System.
In the kitchen service, army cooks prepared more palatable
hospital diets under the watchful supervision of commission
women. This was particularly important since Nashville had
twenty-five military hospitals with thousands of sick and
wounded men who could not tolerate the poorly prepared fare
offered by military chefs. The library program developed an
extensive plan to bring secular and religious reading materials
to army camps in the field and to the hospitals and reading
rooms of the city. These two programs, proved so successful
that they were later applied throughout all Federal army and
navy commands during the Civil War.
The work of the Christian Commission has been little known
or appreciated by Civil War historians, who have generally
ascribed almost all civilian relief work to the United States
Sanitary Commission. The Sanitary Commission was a larger
and more secular organization that relied on many paid agents,
rather than a mostly volunteer system.
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