Pamphila
Stanton Wolcott, 1827-1899
Pamphila Stanton
Wilcott was a woman who had always been defined in terms of her male
relatives. She was the daughter of a prominent Steubenville, Ohio, physician.
She was the sister of Edwin Stanton, secretary of War during the Civil
War. She was the wife of a brilliant Akron attorney, who became assistant
secretary of War. But Pamphila Stanton Wolcott deserves some credit
of her own. She has been generally credited with organizing the Akron
Soldiers Aid Society during the Civil War.
Pamphila Stanton
was born in Steubenville, Ohio, in 1827; she was the daughter of David
Stanton, a physician, and Lucy Norman. She was bright young woman but
always stood in the shadow of her older brother Edwin. It was through
her brother, then a successful attorney, that she met her future husband
Christopher Parsons Wolcott. Young Wolcott was studying law with Edwin
Stanton and his partner. In 1844, Pamphila Stanton and Christopher Wolcott
married and moved to Akron.
Christopher Wolcott
was a man on the make. He was a brilliant attorney and soon became the
senior partner in the prosperous Akron law firm of Wolcott & Upson.
But he would soon make his mark in politics. Governor Chase appointed
Wolcott as the state's Attorney General. In 1861, he was appointed Judge
Advocate General. By 1862, he was working in Washington, D.C. with his
brother in law and mentor Edwin Stanton at the War Department. Wolcott
was assistant secretary of War. Wolcott was also a workaholic. His long
days -- the Summit Beacon reported that he worked from 6 a.m.
until 2 a.m. every day -- led to his early death in 1863.
While Christopher
Wolcott was off traveling the state as Attorney General or working in
Washington, his wife cared for the couple's three sons and carried on
her own life in Akron. She came into her own during the Civil War.
Pamphila Stanton
Wolcott is generally credited with starting Akron's Soldier's Aid Society.
She also served as its first president. Affiliated with Cleveland's
Sanitary Commission, the Akron society contributed literally thousands
of dollars worth of food and clothing to the hospitalized wounded and
sick soldiers. The Soldiers Aid Society members spent evenings knitting
mittens and socks for soldiers. They also packed food and other goods
for the Army in a small room above a store on South Howard Street. The
food and goods were shipped to Cleveland's Sanitary Commission and then
onto the hospitals that cared for the wounded. In addition, the organization
raised much money by holding "dime parties," socials and dinners.
By 1862, she had
retired from the leadership of the Soldiers Aid Society. Her husband's
ill health demanded her full attention.
Politically well
connected, Pamphila Wolcott went on to hold a government position in
Washington in the pension department from 1878 to 1882, during the administration
of Rutherford B. Hayes, a president from Ohio.
At the time of her
death, the Beacon Journal observed that Wolcott was extremely
bright, very well connected politically and "happiest when working
for the cause of charity."
--Kathleen
Endres
