Civilians, women, black participants, and children got pushed to the border of historical discussion. Recent years historians have began to explore the Civil War experiencing from these important groups and innovative scholarship in these areas is flourishing, even though much of this knowledge that's new has not entered the mainstream just yet. At the outbreak of the Civil War American nursing was still in it's infancy. In the South pretty much women just served as nurses within their own families. The master’s wife nursed her husband, children, and slaves only on large plantations. Lots of Southern women already were caring for sickly patients, and nursing automatically considered one of women's duties. It wasn't a job just yet that ladies of breeding and stature would be interested in. Delicate and modest is what Southern women was regarded as. Whenever Fort Sumter got fired upon, and wounded and dying people came pouring in from the battlefields, the South found themselves not prepared for this big accident. The first nurses that were serving the Confederacy were recovering male soldiers, while their own illness prevented from providing some proper care. Many men had resented being appointed to hospital duty. In the South