Medical care during the American Civil War

This work examines medical care during the American Civil War. The medical departments of the opposing armies had much in common. Both were organized along the same structural lines, that of the old U.S. Army. Northern and Southern doctors possessed the same base of medical knowledge. Both medical s...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Freemon, Frank Reed
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Ann Arbor ProQuest Dissertations & Theses 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Abstract This work examines medical care during the American Civil War. The medical departments of the opposing armies had much in common. Both were organized along the same structural lines, that of the old U.S. Army. Northern and Southern doctors possessed the same base of medical knowledge. Both medical services expanded from a small nidus of experienced military physicians to a huge system of general hospitals, caring for thousands of sick and wounded soldiers. Using collated medical statistics, this work compares the results of medical efforts by the North and the South and concludes that the Medical Department of the United States Army was superior to its counterpart of the Confederate States Army. Northern medical care continued to improve throughout the War. Despite massive efforts at improvisation, Confederate medicine deteriorated after 1863. The North enjoyed an abundance of medical supplies; most important was the anti-malarial drug quinine. This abundance, compared to the relative paucity available to the Confederacy, provides a partial explanation for the superiority of Northern medical care. A more important difference between Northern and Southern medicine involves leadership at the highest levels. The vigorous direction of Union medicine by Surgeon General William A. Hammond helped keep Northern armies healthy. The leadership of Confederate Surgeon General Samuel Preston Moore was dignified but less effective. Ironically, when the War ended, Moore remained as the honored chief of Confederate medicine, while Hammond had been dismissed from the Union army because of a court-martial conviction on trumped up charges.
AbstractList This work examines medical care during the American Civil War. The medical departments of the opposing armies had much in common. Both were organized along the same structural lines, that of the old U.S. Army. Northern and Southern doctors possessed the same base of medical knowledge. Both medical services expanded from a small nidus of experienced military physicians to a huge system of general hospitals, caring for thousands of sick and wounded soldiers. Using collated medical statistics, this work compares the results of medical efforts by the North and the South and concludes that the Medical Department of the United States Army was superior to its counterpart of the Confederate States Army. Northern medical care continued to improve throughout the War. Despite massive efforts at improvisation, Confederate medicine deteriorated after 1863. The North enjoyed an abundance of medical supplies; most important was the anti-malarial drug quinine. This abundance, compared to the relative paucity available to the Confederacy, provides a partial explanation for the superiority of Northern medical care. A more important difference between Northern and Southern medicine involves leadership at the highest levels. The vigorous direction of Union medicine by Surgeon General William A. Hammond helped keep Northern armies healthy. The leadership of Confederate Surgeon General Samuel Preston Moore was dignified but less effective. Ironically, when the War ended, Moore remained as the honored chief of Confederate medicine, while Hammond had been dismissed from the Union army because of a court-martial conviction on trumped up charges.
Author Freemon, Frank Reed
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  fullname: Freemon, Frank Reed
BookMark eNrjYmDJy89L5WTQ8k1NyUxOzFFITixKVUgpLcrMS1coyUhVcMxNLQJK5Ck4Z5Zl5iiEJxbxMLCmJeYUp_JCaW4GZTfXEGcP3aSsqoz8vPTs1PiCoszcxKLKeEdHT0sjYzMTMyNj4lQBAKSkLK4
ContentType Dissertation
DBID A6X
DatabaseName ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Full Text - DRAA
DatabaseTitle Dissertation Abstracts International
DatabaseTitleList Dissertation Abstracts International
Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: A6X
  name: ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Full Text - DRAA
  url: http://www.pqdtcn.com/
  sourceTypes: Publisher
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Medicine
DissertationCategory Medicine
Science history
American history
DissertationDegree Ph.D.
DissertationDegreeDate Wed Jan 01 00:00:00 EST 1992
DissertationDegreeDate_xml – year: 1992
  text: 1992
DissertationSchool University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
DissertationSchool_xml – name: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
ExternalDocumentID AAI9236462
GroupedDBID A6X
ID FETCH-bjzhongke_primary_AAI92364623
IEDL.DBID A6X
IngestDate Thu May 12 12:58:07 EDT 2022
IsPeerReviewed false
IsScholarly false
Language English
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-bjzhongke_primary_AAI92364623
Notes Adviser: O. Vernon Burton.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 53-07, Section: A, page: 2515.
PageCount 355
ParticipantIDs bjzhongke_primary_AAI9236462
PublicationCentury 1900
PublicationDate 1992
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 1992-01-01
PublicationDate_xml – year: 1992
  text: 1992
PublicationDecade 1990
PublicationPlace Ann Arbor
PublicationPlace_xml – name: Ann Arbor
PublicationYear 1992
Publisher ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
Publisher_xml – name: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
Score 2.5243056
Snippet This work examines medical care during the American Civil War. The medical departments of the opposing armies had much in common. Both were organized along the...
SourceID bjzhongke
SourceType Publisher
SubjectTerms american history
medicine
science history
Title Medical care during the American Civil War
URI http://www.pqdtcn.com/thesisDetails/327C6DA2617D2472F5FE427CA1547295
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwY2BQSUkxBNUDibqGxoZJuiYmaSa6SSaJBrrAlm2SpUEqsJIwB-139gg294uwcHEFHZMDu20TtKqyoDClJDkPXEoD20DFmcUu4MWUxfrGRubOZi6OoDPEXYxMzI3cTN1cTYBijsBmALCNCD7IFFjDgtpHZhHcDJxJWVUZ-XnpsCP-wTWGmwB17BJk4HFBmjAXYmBKzRNm4PCFToiLMGhBJ1oUQCu4FCB7DhWAdijAZmIUnDPLMnMUwhOLRBmU3VxDnD104Q6OL4AcNRHv6OhpCTriHdhIEWNgycvPS5VgUDAClgkmiUYpJkkpwHBNA7bRUozTzJPNU4GNr6TERDNJBhl8Jknhl5Zm4IIsSQUNM8gwsJQUlabKMjAXp5TKgQMWAHEuhdA
link.rule.ids 312,782,786,787,2064,4056
linkProvider Digital Resource Acquisition Alliance of Chinese Academic Libraries (DRAA)
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adissertation&rft.genre=dissertation&rft.title=Medical+care+during+the+American+Civil+War&rft.DBID=A6X&rft.au=Freemon%2C+Frank+Reed&rft.date=1992-01-01&rft.pub=ProQuest+Dissertations+%26+Theses&rft.inst=University+of+Illinois+at+Urbana-Champaign&rft.externalDocID=AAI9236462