Under the Knife

Another fantastic Disunion article, though not one for the faint of heart or weak of stomach. There are some fascinating facts and anecdotes in here, including the higher probability of Confederate generals than Confederate soldiers needing treatment, and the impressive speed with which amputations were performed. As the author points out, the legacy of the war was evident for decades afterwards in its limbless veterans.

Because surgeons preferred to operate outdoors where lighting and ventilation were better, thousands of soldiers witnessed amputations firsthand. Passers-by and even wounded men waiting their turn watched as surgeons sawed off arms and legs and tossed them onto ever growing piles. The poet Walt Whitman witnessed such a scene when he visited Fredericksburg in search of his wounded brother. “One of the first things that met my eyes in camp,” he wrote, “was a heap of feet, arms, legs, etc., under a tree in front of a hospital.” Indeed, after the December 1862 Battle of Fredericksburg, Union surgeons performed almost 500 amputations.

Early in the war surgeons earned the nickname “Saw-bones” because they seemed eager to amputate. This eagerness stemmed not from overzealousness but from the knowledge that infections developed quickly in mangled flesh, and amputation was the most effective way to prevent it. Those limbs removed within 48 hours of injury were called primary amputations, and those removed after 48 hours were called secondary amputations. The mortality rate for primary amputations was about 25 percent; that for secondary amputations was twice as high, thanks to the fact that most secondary amputations were performed after gangrene or blood poisoning developed in the wound. Surgeons learned that amputating the limb after it became infected actually caused the infection to spread, and patients frequently died. Thus, the patient was much more likely to survive if a primary amputation was performed before infection set in.

via Under the Knife – NYTimes.com.

Looking for Lincoln’s DNA

This is both interesting and yet horrific. A quest for Lincoln’s DNA, which is most easily found in the trail he left from the chair in Ford’s Theatre to the pillow in the Petersen House.

Due to DNA’s fragile nature, she had so far been unable to retrieve any DNA, which meant the project was in limbo until more artefacts could be sourced.

This would not be easy as “bits of dead presidents are hard to come by”, she said.

However, because Lincoln was shot in the head and “head wounds bleed abundantly” he was reported to have bled on “a lot of things” in the nine hours it took him to die, she said.

via Looking for Lincoln’s DNA | Otago Daily Times Online News : Otago, South Island, New Zealand & International News.

Surgery’s Cutting Edge

A new Civil War Medicine museum is opening in Frederick, MD. Given the description in this article, it sounds well worth a visit.

In the beginning of the war, wounded soldiers languished for days before they were retrieved. Sometimes their friends would stop fighting and carry them to the rear, knowing no one else would, recounts historian James M. McPherson in Battle Cry of Freedom. Litter-bearers were musicians, other soldiers and anyone who could be spared. Letterman developed a system for evacuating the wounded, establishing ambulances and dedicated personnel for each regiment.The wounded were treated in three stages: “There was a dressing station 60 to 70 yards from the front line” Dammann said, noting that 350 doctors on the Union side were killed in battle. “First aid was done here, tourniquets and splinting. From there, they went back into battle or to a field hospital, maybe in a barn or church three or four miles behind the lines. Here they had operating surgeons, where they did amputations. Wounds of head, chest and abdomen werent treated; they were given painkillers and most died there. From here, they were evacuated, usually by train, to fixed hospitals.” Letterman’s system saved lives, but for every man killed in battle, two died of disease. Many perished from malnutrition, especially in the South.

via washingtonpost.com: On Surgerys Cutting Edge In Civil War.

Leale’s Letters

You’d think all the Lincoln documents would’ve been unearthed, after 150 years of access, but you’d be wrong, thankfully.

The latest news is Charles Leale’s official report on the assassination. Leale’s experiences are already well-documented – Sarah Vowell quotes extensively from a letter to his mother in the days following – but new documents are new documents, and I’ll happily take them. (Can you tell I was a history student? So jealous of these stack-diggers who uncover the gems!)

A doctor’s account of his frantic efforts to save the life of President Abraham Lincoln has been rediscovered in the United States, after being lost to history for 150 years.
It was found by chance among hundreds of boxes of old medical reports in the National Archives.
On April 14, 1865, Dr Charles Leale happened to be in the same Washington theatre as the US President, watching the play My American Cousin, when he heard a gunshot and saw a man leap onto the stage.
Leale, 23, who had only received his medical degree six weeks earlier, then became the first person to tend to Lincoln’s wounds and documented the tragic encounter in a 21-page handwritten report.

via A doctor’s bid to save dying Lincoln – timesofmalta.com.

Civil War Surgery

I expected this article to be another “Civil War Days” entry, talking about reenactors and cotton candy for the kids, but it was a surprisingly fascinating look at Civil War surgery techniques, containing a few new-to-me facts (the first of which I’ll research a bit more before accepting it as gospel):

It was considered a great honor for a soldier to be amputated on his regimental flag, because that was a representation of the unit, Pekarek said.

If the injured soldier did not survive, the flag would continue on, stained with his blood. That practice brought unit cohesion and encouraged many soldiers to continue fighting and following that flag

And this:
After determining that amputation is necessary, the surgeon would either given him chloroform or ether. The north had ether, and the south had chloroform, which is easier to make than ether, but it’s also explosive. Both had similar properties in taking the patient under so the surgeon could amputate.

Warning to prospective readers, though: This is pretty gruesome stuff. Be prepared for some squeam.

http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=20449216&BRD=1160&PAG=461&dept_id=190958&rfi=6