Mission of 'Mother Leebrick' was caring for soldiers

Elizabeth Angus Worrell Leebrick's life spanned most of the 19th century. She was born in Lancaster County, Pa., in 1799 and died in Quincy in 1890. She married Benjamin Worrell in Pennsylvania at 19 and had two sons. Her father was a Revolutionary War soldier and her one son, Franklin A. Worrell, was killed while on horseback in Hancock County. While her parents were Seventh Day (German) Baptist, she became a Methodist. She was active in the church for the rest of her life.
After her husband died in 1843, Mrs. Worrell moved to Quincy, where she later met and married George Leebrick. The couple moved to Burlington, Iowa, and opened a hotel. When the Civil War broke out in 1861, they returned to Quincy. An 1869 newspaper article said, "Soon after the beginning of the war, as she saw the omnibus going along one of the streets of Quincy, with wounded soldiers in it, and blood running from them, she said to her husband, ‘Let us rent our house and board and you go to the hospital and read and write for the soldiers and I will help to nurse them.' " The reporter added, "She shrank from nothing that was prudent for a woman to do in the hospital." She was 61.
She treated the sick and wounded as a mother would with kind words and deeds. She was not intimidated by the officers and did any task assigned, including dressing wounds. She tired of waiting for supplies and often used her own money to buy them. When that was gone, she mortgaged her property and borrowed money. With tireless energy, she made several trips to Iowa, Indiana, Missouri and throughout Illinois, which were described as "begging trips" and gathered supplies needed for the soldiers' care. The goods were shipped to Quincy and distributed to the sick and wounded in the hospitals. At the close of the war the quartermaster at Quincy estimated that "Mrs. Leebrick had saved the government over $14,000 by her personal solicitations."
She traveled south after the Battle of Pittsburg Landing (Shiloh) where she did all she could. Discovering unopened boxes of clean clothes, she asked the officer why they were not being distributed to the wounded. He said he was waiting for orders. She said, "Give me an ax and I will open them. My father was a Revolutionary soldier and fought for liberty, which I intend to enjoy in this case." The sick and wounded called her "the soldiers' mother." She was forever after referred to as Mother Leebrick. The Quincy Whig published a letter on May 17, 1862, from four wounded soldiers of the 431 Regiment Illinois Volunteers, thanking Mrs. Leebrick, Mrs. Dickhut and Mrs. Pfeifer, who "…aided us through pain and sorrow."
In the fall, she would take a wagon with boys to help gather apples in the country to make apple butter, for which she became well known. Farmers coming into Quincy would put wood in their wagons to give her for the fires necessary to cook the apples. According to one official in the sanitary commission, "A first class article of Apple Butter is one of the best things for the ‘boys'…." At one point she gathered 800 pounds of meat and made bologna sausage for the soldiers.
At the close of the war in 1865, she was still working tirelessly. She and her husband returned to their home and opened it to soldiers traveling home. It was estimated that the Leebricks helped over 200 soldiers in transit while feeding upward of 700. While Gen. Ulysses S. Grant was in Quincy in 1868, he met with Mrs. Leebrick and said to her, "Live forever, Mrs. Leebrick." She had traveled with Grant on several occasions on the river boats during the war. Later she sat on the platform during the memorial service in Quincy in 1885 for President Grant.
With all of her exertions and expenses during the war, she had little money in old age. She appeared before the clerk of the circuit court in Adams County to claim "a pension on account of services rendered by her as a nurse in the Union Army during the late war of the rebellion under the Act of Congress entitled, ‘An Act for the Relief of Elizabeth Leebrick approved August 5th, 1882.' " At 83, she received $16 a month for the rest of her life.
In announcing her death, The Quincy Daily Whig said, "The deceased was 91 years of age, and in some regards the most noted woman in the city. Her labor and service for the soldiers of the union during the war were so marvelous that an account of them would read like a romance."
The Rev. Dr. Samuel Hopkins Emery (1815-1901) spoke at her burial in October 1890, which was attended by many of the veterans at the Soldiers' Home. Emery had been the minister of the First Congregational Church in Quincy for 14 years and was a chaplain for the Quincy hospitals and also on the Mississippi River transports carrying the wounded to Northern hospitals. Even Mother Bickerdyke of Galesburg, famous in her own right for her work in hospitals during the Civil War, wrote to Emery in 1897 talking about the supplies he brought from Quincy saying, "They came like a gift from heaven, and lasted us about three meals, including Mother Liebrick's [sic] apple butter. Our dear old German friend! God bless Mother Liebrick!"
Arlis Dittmer is a retired medical librarian working as a grant consultant. During her years with Blessing Health System, she became interested in medical and nursing history -- both topics frequently overlooked in history.
Sources
"Card of Thanks." The Quincy Whig, May 17, 1862, 3.
"Death of Mrs. Elizabeth A. Leebrick." The Quincy Daily Whig, October 31, 1890.
Elizabeth Leebrick Records. Manuscript Collection of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County, Quincy, IL.
Emery, Rev. Dr. Samuel Hopkins. "Quincy Women in the War." The Quincy Morning Whig, January 11, 1898.
Kalb, A. J. "Tribute to a Quincy Woman." The Quincy Daily Herald, May 26, 1869, 2.
"Mother Leebrick." The Quincy Daily Journal, November 9, 1890, 6.





