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

Sons of the GAR

There are very few people alive today who can claim a direct link to the Civil War, but Grand Rapids found one:

“He’s only one of 20 men alive today who can claim their father fought for the Union,” says Butgereit, quoting from extensive research compiled by the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War.

Becker’s father, Charles Conrad Becker, who was born in 1846, lied and said he was 19 (in truth, he was 17) when he enlisted with the North. He fought in the Battle Above the Clouds on Lookout Mountain in 1863 and a year later the Battle of Franklin — both in Tennessee. The bloody clashes totalled nearly 10,000 casualties.

The Civil War and Mumbai Street Food

This article is poorly written and misleadingly titled, but it is interesting to see the effect the war had on far flung places and mundane realities, in this case, the development of a popular Indian street meal.

This is when a group of Gujaratis began trading in the area now known as Dalal Street, starting Asia’s first stock exchange a few years later. They traded mainly in cotton, and many made fortunes in the period 1861-65 when global supply of the stuff was affected by the American Civil War. Abraham Lincoln’s navy blockaded New Orleans and the Mississippi and Manchester’s looms came to a halt, sending cotton prices shooting. The Gujarati merchant is one of the world’s finest managers of uncertainty and he made a lot of money. These early globalizers worked, as today’s call centre workers, late into the night when rates were wired in and orders wired out at American and European times. By then everyone would be quite famished and the wives would be asleep at home.

This demand for regular food at an unusual time created a unique supply. The traders were served by street stalls that invented a late-night special: pav bhaji.

http://www.livemint.com/2011/08/04210819/What-Mumbaikars-owe-to-the-Ame.html?h=B

Black Troops in the Confederacy

NPR unearthed an interesting story on a very rare, newly-inducted United Daughter of the Confederacy.

Mattie Clyburn Rice, 88, spent years searching through archives to prove her father was a black Confederate. As she leafs through a notebook filled with official-looking papers, Rice stops to read a faded photocopy with details of her father’s military service.

“At Hilton Head while under fire of the enemy, he carried his master out of the field of fire on his shoulder, that he performed personal service for Robert E. Lee. That was his pension record,” Rice says.

http://www.npr.org/2011/08/07/138587202/after-years-of-research-confederate-daughter-arises

Reduced? Reuse, Recycle.

Neat article on Confederate currency, which found a new lease on life in the post-bellum.

In the late 1870s other advertisers found ready advertising use for the plethora of cheap CSA notes by also imprinting messages on note backs, as Bechtel had successfully done. One of the earliest was printed in October 1878 for the North Georgia Fair on backs of Series 1862 $100 notes, and Series 1864 $500s and $100s.

http://www.numismaster.com/ta/numis/Article.jsp?ad=article&ArticleId=12302