Juliet Opie Hopkins
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Juliet_Opie_Hopkins an entity of type: Thing
Juliet Ann Hopkins (née Opie; May 7, 1818 – March 9, 1890) was born on a plantation in Jefferson County, Virginia (present-day West Virginia). After her marriage to Arthur F. Hopkins of Mobile, Alabama, she relocated to that state. During the Civil War, the couple sold most of their real estate holdings and donated the money to the cause of the Confederate States of America. When her husband was appointed to oversee hospitals during the war, she went to work converting tobacco factories into hospitals. She made daily visits to the wounded, and received a battlefield injury in the course of her duties.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Juliet Opie Hopkins
rdf:langString
Juliet Opie Hopkins
rdf:langString
Juliet Opie Hopkins
rdf:langString
Washington, D.C., US
xsd:date
1890-03-09
rdf:langString
Jefferson County, Virginia, US
xsd:date
1818-05-07
xsd:integer
36180614
xsd:integer
1106907609
rdf:langString
Miss Ritchie's private school
xsd:date
1818-05-07
rdf:langString
Juliet Ann Opie
rdf:langString
"The Florence Nightingale of the South"
rdf:langString
Juliet Opie Hopkins Ayres
xsd:date
1890-03-09
rdf:langString
Nursing
rdf:langString
Alexander George Gordon
rdf:langString
Arthur Francis Hopkins
rdf:langString
Juliet Ann Hopkins (née Opie; May 7, 1818 – March 9, 1890) was born on a plantation in Jefferson County, Virginia (present-day West Virginia). After her marriage to Arthur F. Hopkins of Mobile, Alabama, she relocated to that state. During the Civil War, the couple sold most of their real estate holdings and donated the money to the cause of the Confederate States of America. When her husband was appointed to oversee hospitals during the war, she went to work converting tobacco factories into hospitals. She made daily visits to the wounded, and received a battlefield injury in the course of her duties. Her husband died within months of the close of the war, and she spent the rest of her life in poverty. When she died, she was interred with a full military burial at Arlington National Cemetery, with the Alabama congressional delegation serving as her pallbearers. In 1991, she was inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
9713
rdf:langString
Juliet Ann Opie
xsd:gYear
1818
xsd:gYear
1890