Weekend. I think the book festival is wonderful thing that happens, thousands of people showing up to celebrate books and to buy them. [applause] what at. Concept. [laughter] and children and family, usuallily grandchildren go with me but im going to catch a plane and go see them in a minute, but it is a wonderful and the the fact is that i where these history books often many of the characters in history books are political wives and as a political wife started festival was laura bush who went to the fabulous library of congress and said, i did a texas book festival, can we do one in washington, and it shows you what a fabulous legacy political wives throughoutwh our history havend left here in washington. So that makes it even more delightful for me to be able to participate in it. Also, by the way, we should just say that the volunteers at this festival are the heros. [applause] because theres no way that this can go on with hundreds of volunteers, so thank you all very much for what you do. I had written other history books about women and history and i never was going to write about the civil war. First of all, all of my ancestors fought on the losing side and so i didnt really have any interest in it and secondly its an awful war, its a horrible, horrible time in our history where we lost more than 600 thousand americans and a failure of the political system that these politicians could not get to emancipation without war. Somebody that cares about politics, that to me was dispiriting that i really did not want to write about it. But my publisher had other ideas andso was pretty clear that i ws writing a book about the civil war, so i started to think about that, but i actually had absolutely no idea what that book was going to be. You know, i knew it would be about women, plenty of the others, and people say to me, why do you write about women. Hu . Seems fairly obvious to me. The side of the fact that im in a skirt, i do think that the other half of human kind should have books written about them. [applause] and i would actually argue that history is not accurate without knowing what the rest of the world was up to. But so i know it was about women and i knew that i would make great discoveries. I knew that i would find wonderful womens letters that would just delight me. I have to say the mens letters particularly in the founding but throughout our history are so studied ands edited and ready r publication that they read it so they were written by the bronze and marble statutes. The womens letters are just letters, funny, truthful. Theres a concept, and they and theyll tell you the whole story, you know, in the in the same letter youll read why we should go to war at france and i my new hat i left at home and someone is having babies and losing them. You get a full picture of society in womens letters. You find them because most of them have never been published an you find delightful things, my favorite still remains from my second history book, ladies of liberty and written by luisa katherine. It was written when he was secretary of state. She wrote the wonderful letters home from washington to john adams. Abigel had died. And so because of the hammering congress stayed much longer than usual. So finally they go home and in july a meeting of the trust trustees and one of the trustees says, we are going to need a new building. The woman said, the legislations had been very long, the fathers of the nation had left 40 cases to be provided for by the public and our institution was the most likely to be called upon to maintain, Congress Left 40 pregnant women behind and there were only 187 members of congress. [laughter] i dont know. But they and so she was up and she says, i recommended a petition for great body to establish a founding institution and certainly move that tw t two additional dollars a day that they had given in increase would beti for supporting the institution. It doesnt get better than that. And then it did turn out that one of the great letter writers that i found for this book was her daughterinlaw that was married the Charles Francis adams and she came to washington before he went to be the union embassador to the court of st. James through the war, and she wrote the wonderful feisty letters homes calling him a a toad and behaved like children. I can get behind that. [laughter] my personal favorite is i will advise any young women who wishes to have an easy quiet life not to marry an adams. [laughter] i knew that the letters, whatever i found would be wonderful. And so i started thinking about my own growing up here in washington after world war ii and at that point the mall was covered with what were called temporary buildings. I actually remember as a very little girl asking my mother what temporary meant because the buildings didnt seem to go going anywhere. They were very ugly. Since replaced by the ugly buildings on independence avenue, but they were a physical manifestation of how the war had increased the role of government. It started with world war i and world war ii and how it made washingtons place in the country a very different place than it had been at the beginning of the century. I also knew the stories of the rosie t government girls are coming to washington during the war and i knew that the the role of women during the war had promoted womens rights after the war but it took the war to get the democrats to do it in 1944 ande then the Movement Toward rights again coming out of the experiences of the war. I t started wondering, well, mae thats it. Maybe the civil war had a similar impact on womans lives and on the role of washington in society, in the country. And so i started researching that and i turned out that yes, in fact, that was exactly the case and so thats the book. It was just fascinating to learn about it because its as much history of washington and the period as it is a history of the women and as somebody who has lived all of my life in addition to louisiana, it was very of great interest to me. And some of these women are womendd that you know of like clara barton and dorothy but you probably dont know all about them and some of the thing that is they did were absolutely remarkable. Clara had come here to work in the government, worked in the Patent Office and actually made as much as men during a period of time. During the war, government girls did show up in the same way that they did in world war ii mainly with women coming to make a living with their husbands and the men in their lives gone, but then coin coincided with Congress Passing the bill of printing the green backs to finance the war. Theck money comes off in great sheets of bills. Its a lot of fun to watch if youve never seen it go. Now its cut up by individual a machine. Women sat cutting bill by bill by bill and the treasurer of the United States general skinner said, women are just better than scissors than men are. [laughter] rosie the e qif equivalent in my view worked in arsenal like they did around the country, but here in washington it was mainly very young and very poor women who worked in the arsenal and there was this horrendous explosion that killed a couplen of dozen of these girls, the day after the newspaper the story was awful to read. Pulling the tarp off of the young bodies. Basically unrecognizable. They were trapped in their hooped hurst skirts and you see thepo midcentury women working in a very dangerous job in this brilling hot arsenal and being proper in their skirts. Thousands of people showed up for the funeral lead by the president and there is a monument to them recognizing their tremendous contribution to the war effort. And as i say, there were women that you do know about like clara barton and dorothy, there were women journalists who came to town. Again, some of them came before the war. One of them was grace i mean, jane. She was the first women allow today write from the senate press gallery, but she was so kicked out of the Senate Gallery for writing vicious truths [laughter] she wrote that Daniel Webster was a drunk and the men didnt likess that, and again, it reminded me a will the of my own experiences. [laughter]. In washington and the reporters came in large numbers. Dorothea dix was here before the war lobbying in congress and she was so influential that she is actually given a little alcove in the senate library, by the senate in which to do her lobbying. When she was here she established saint elizabeth, then she went off to other places when the bill she was trying to get through was vetoed. She then came back and brought herself into the Surgeon General and said she would be the superintendent of the male nurses. There were no female nurses, she created that and opened the professor profession of nurses. She was a formidable figure. There is just a few female doctors in the country at the time, 11 of them was a surgeon, mary walker, who again came to washington and presented herself to be into work for the union army. She was not hire, she worked as a volunteer. In a volunteer. In the course of her work during the war she was eventually hired, she was was captured and she had such horrific experiences that she is still, the only woman to have won the medal of honor. It was at mary walker during the civil war. By the time dorothea dix died, she had created more than 100 mental hospitals around the world including in japan, meaning, meaning she had to travel by herself there. Clara barton, what you know about, this is what drives me nuts about this book, clara founded the american red cross. Really, was it hard . Did anything go before that, what was involved there . Well of course a a great deal was involved. She came as a governor networker and then did heroic work during the war as a nurse and as a supplier. She went to europe afterwards and discovered the red cross and came back and lobbied for two decades to get the Geneva Convention ratified by the senate. When they finally did ratify them it was with the american amendment, which which she wrote which said the red cross could go to natural disasters as well as to war zones. So anytime you see the red cross , after a flood, hurricane, hurricane, anywhere in the world, its because clara barton, and she then went back as the american representative, she got the american amendment adopted by the red cross. There is a lot involved in founding the red cross. But i but i of course was most interested, because im me, in the political women. I got to know a lot of them very well and i liked a lot of them a lot. One who i really very much enjoy getting to know was marina davis, Jefferson Jefferson davis wife, him not so much. She was here as the wife, senator and all the women of washington after madison died was really buying to be the chief of bell. They describe themselves themselves as that. One of them, who i write about wrote a book about herself, called the belle of the 50s. So they all knew each other, they basically all liked each other even though they provide. One of the of the women who they all liked enormously was a dell cutts who is a Dolly Madisons greatniece. She then married Stephen Douglas, senator who defeated Abraham Lincoln in the famous Lincoln Douglas debate. She was furious this was happening. She wrote, the dirty speculator and party pics are, broken and health by drink with his first wife, buys an elegant well bred women because she is poor and her father is proud. But then she says its a good thing there is a new water system coming to washington so that barry came his wife in the factories douglas may wash some off of her. If he dont come they will be a perfect rooms with better ventilation. You dont learn from the men was Stephen Douglas think stinks. When she did go off to richmond to be the first lady of the confederacy, she stayed in close touch with her friends particularly elizabeth of blair house. Lizzie lee wrote wonderful letters. Her brother was in the congress, her father was a big advisory to lincoln, her husband was a cousin of robert e lee, was in the union navy. Because he was in the navy she wrote to him almost every day. And we have the letters of the wartime letters are published, and they are utterly delightful letters. She and marina tate stayed in touch through the war. She was also one of the few people who he friended mary lincoln, not easy to do. Mary lincoln tank came to town at a tough time, it was a southern town, town, they didnt like Abraham Lincoln, and i thought she was kind of a rough westerner. Not fair but that was the assumption. She then made life harder for herself by being a difficult person. At one point she was accused of messing with the state of the union message. There is an investigation of the first lady, private communications. She had a personal server to [applause]. He carried the letters backandforth and she is accused of leaking this to the new york herald, either in exchange for for money or she was having an affair or depending on the rumor of the moment. She was not a wellliked person. After the president was shot, the only person she really have become friendly with was elizabeth correctly, her dressmaker who is really much more than a dressmaker, she was an artist, shoes written about at great personage. Mary lincoln in the white house for a few months goes crazy, out of her mind after the president was shot and the woman was there with her and takes her back to chicago. Then elizabeth correctly wrote a tellall book. Nothing changes, it ended her relationship with mrs. Lincoln and it actually ended her business to because others were worried she might write similar books. She was unable to do what she was interested in which is basically social work. People started showing up in washington trying to free themselves before me format the patient and after emancipation she saw she was a former slave herself and she saw the terrible circumstances. So she started what was called the Contraband Relief Association which became freemans relief association. She was very involved in getting people to help these desperately poor people because she did have the contact and was able to read those the money. Thats what you started to think was the people had been behind the scenes or doing other things were now doing coming forward as the war ended. Virginia clay who had been though wife of an alabama senator and a delightful cot in the prewar period, she wrote a book about herself and was suddenly on platforms after the wars with horace greeley. People who had fought her husband bitterly, leading up to the war and during the war, she, she had, because of her experiences during the war felt she could come forward and be someone herself and use her own voice to promote a cause which had not occurred to her before the war. Marina davis, after Jefferson Davis died, long drawnout difficult situation, he had been in jail, accused of being one of the conspirator issues, she worked to get him out of jail. Thats another thing these women showed up in the white house all the time. They would just go marching into the white house and tell off the president whoever he was. I am the president whoever he was. I am so jealous, i cant tell you. Andrew jost johnson got clays has been out of jail just to make his wife go away. Now mainly she wanted the money, she wanted to make a living but she wanted the freedom. There is a big scandal of the first lady of the confederacy was moving to new york. She had always been a little too all of the complexity and for a perfect southern belle. So she wrote wrote to her daughter and said, i am free and 62 im going to move wherever i want to. So while she was in you worksheet befriended julia grants. It was page one in every newspaper in the country. Which was another great thing now, you can get these newspapers online, the online, the library of congress has a bunch of them. There they were, and what they knew they were doing was bringing about reconciliation. Thats what a lot of these women were involved in. In their own face voices after the war was over. You see the tremendous impact it has had in their lives and their role of women in america going forward. In fact, clara barton said at a memorial day established by the women, she said that one of her addresses at a celebration in the 1880s, she said because of the war woman was at least 50 years in advance of the normal position which continued peace would have assured her. So that is these women. Thats a capital gains, their remarkable people and i love getting to know them and i know and i know you will too. Thank you very much for being here. [applause]. Their microphones at the front of each aisle of folks are appreciated if you could go to the microns because there taping this. Im. Im fascinated by dorothys career be as at that time it was public and nontraditional role for people. They are talking about was definitely there, and i do write about it. Women lobbyists were considered maybe exchanging some papers for the votes, and there was some of that with women government workers, too. This is one of the reasons the Civil Service was created, because to get the job from a congressman had to recommend them, and sometimes he would demand something in return. So it always had a little with about it. But they still do those jobs,jobs, and there were lots of women lobbyists after the war. Thank you. Good morning. Who would you put on the ten or 20 . [laughter] i have ai have a hard time with this, and part of the reason for it is that women just did not have the same kind of power as a Benjamin Franklin or an Abraham Lincoln. Butlincoln. But i can make a good case for clara barton. Good case for clara barton. She is not somebody you would want to hang which frankly. She was very worthy. An earthquake hits nepal and the red cross is there and it is because of her aunt that is true this many years later. I could make that case. [applause] not to change the subject too much but an inner city library used to fund raise and came across a book i paid 0. 50 for, in two generations, three major religions. America, america. Is there have the ending . 49 years this week. Steve and i have hosted and i have cooked at our house for the last 47 years and it is written for marriages. I have enjoyed all three of your books on womens history and i was wondering if you going to continue the journey up. Yes. I dont know how necessarily. People say what is your next project and this book almost kills me. It is like saying mrs. Roberts, you just had triplets. When is the next baby coming . I am not exactly, things rattling around, but the immediate one was here last year, the Childrens Book of Family Matters, wonderfully, wonderfully illustrated book illustrated by diane good, a beautiful book, doing the sequel to that, ladies of liberty for children, that one i can handle. It is good to see you. Many years i have admired you. My question is did clara barn has any connection with free slaves . I dont have she was an abolitionist, she was an abolitionist but i dont have letters from her along those lines and it didnt seem to be a major issue with her. To her, i am saying. There were quite a few there was a woman named josephine im talking about clara barton. She was an abolitionist. It was a cause she was concerned about, but wasnt her major how occupation. Yes. Yes. Thank you for speaking. I wondered how you got access to all these letters. Was that difficult . We have the Manuscript Division of the library of congress and that is a good place to go. When i did Family Matters it was much harder for a couple reasons. We were dealing in the 18thcentury, not the nineteenth and also a lot of people felt that i was the mere journalist and what was i doing rooting around in history . I am supposed to deal with today. People were not as forthcoming as they became after that book came out. Once i published, started getting more help from historical societies, University Libraries and historic homes. The library of congress was always helpful so that is, those are the main places you go. What has happened with modern technology is a helpful soul will scan a lot of the letters and send them to use a you dont have to travel and go through that way. Even once i get them. Once i get them, i stand Nineteenth Century handwritten letters that are written this way and this way because everybody was saving paper and i cant read them very well. I had to hire somebody right to read from so they were quite deciphering, but that is the street in itself. And the second husbands it is kind of a cheery, funny, flirtatious book. She wrote a diary about the same period which is far starker and it had not been published. I get that from Duke University library. Not meant for people who are 5 foot 2. Coming closer, is there a way to handle gloria and world war ii . They are all over the world. We are losing the history of the war at home. There have been some good world war ii womens letters, books written, we were in this war too and there is a book about the wind air Service Pilots from their own families. More than half of it, i kind of like dead people. Long dead people. Even they can be a problem. I was talking to some group about founding mothers and someone was all outraged. That i have portrayed her ancestors in an unsavory light. Give it a rest. Several hundred years now, and she was actually a delightful woman but was of bit of a tramp. Good morning, thank you so much for speaking. I was interested in your comment that you never had any intention, having that affiliation, and going through this process, how has it changed for you . You have associated or preconceptions you had of being a southerner . I am a southerner but i must say since i wrote this book all of a sudden my Southern Confederate army ancestry coming out of the woodwork. One of their uniforms showed up. I can deal with those people. The fact is i love growing up in the south, a tremendous sense of being at home. Would never in a million years tried to pretend they do not exist. I grew up as the child of civil rights supporter from the deep south in the 1960s. And it was a very a cross was burned on our lawn. The very tumultuous time. Would never in a million years say if it does not as violent and wrong headed and immoral as it was. The war itself as i said at the beginning aside from the fact that it was a horrendous loss of life and the people who lost the most were in the south. The area was ravaged for decades to come, but the fact is it was such a failure of the ability of politicians to do what they are supposed to do which is to bring the country together and it is the true object lesson of where we dont want to be in politics, people not able to come together and do the right thing for the good of the country and that is something worth learning over and over and over. [applause] there is a hook over here, very subtle hook, it says wrapped up i am very grateful to all of you for coming. I will immediately go downstairs to sign this book. I really hope that you do read it because you will love getting to know these women and i do think it is important that we do know all of our history, the history of women, thank you so much. [applause] [ina [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] every weekend, book tv offersweekend, book tv offers programming focused on nonfiction authors and books. Keep watching for more, and watch any past programs online at booktv. Org. The book itself is a kind of report from the front. Insofar as it is dealing with the argument people make that we should not refer to what goes on abroad. This is what we do, and it is not controversial. Look at the nature of how our docket has changed during