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.

Lowest of the Low

For the second time in just days, there has been vandalism in a Hudson cemetery.

Officials tell us the flags in the Civil War section of Cedar Park Cemetary were stolen Tuesday.

Those flags were brand new, put there by a veteran who was replacing the flags that were stolen over the weekend.

The city’s Department of Public Works is working with the Hudson Police Department in the investigation.

via More flags stolen from local cemetery – FOX23 News – The 10 O’Clock News.

It’s rare to read a news report like this that ends well, but it’s even rarer to read one that ends hilariously.

Click here for the surprise ending.

In The Steps Of A Civil War Photographer

Between an intense work contract and a lingering cold I caught soon after, I haven’t updated here in weeks.  Sadly, I missed some interesting events, as well as the 150th anniversary of Antietam, early this month.  Here’s a cool feature by NPR, showing a modern wetplate photographer’s retracing of Alexander Gardner’s steps on the battlefield.  Make sure to click through for the before/after shots!

The image you see below was shot in 2012 by wet plate photographer Todd Harrington. He retraced Gardners steps at Antietam, using the same type of equipment: a stereo wet plate camera and glass plates. If you toggle using the “now” and “then” buttons, another image fades in and out: Thats what Gardner captured in 1862.

Whats striking is how, actually, not much has changed. Trees have gotten bigger and roads have been paved. If you look closely at the Dunker Church image, youll see portable toilets in the background; telephone poles along Hagerstown Pike; construction cones sitting on Burnside Bridge. But whats haunting is that the major difference between now and then is a lack of bodies.

via Retracing The Steps Of A Civil War Photographer : NPR.

Petersburg Civil War Center

Petersburg gets a long-awaited visitors’ center, and it promises to be a beauty, as well as historically significant. Can’t wait to visit again – I remember my first visit and the distinct lack of interpretation!

The South Side Railroad was the final railroad to be severed by Union forces. When it was captured on April 1, 1865, said Mary Koik, spokeswoman for the Civil War Trust, "it was a foregone conclusion" that Petersburg would surrender. Richmond surrendered a day later.A room on the second floor of the depot was used as an office after the war by Confederate Gen. William Mahone, a railroad president who later was a founder of Virginia State University.

via Petersburg South Side Depot to be restored as Civil War Center | Richmond Times-Dispatch.

Day Lewis as Lincoln

I’m getting excited for Spielberg’s Lincoln film. He’s not my favourite director ever, but his movies are always entertaining. Day-Lewis isn’t an actor I’ve seen much of, but I know his method and the results are outstanding. I hope this turns out to be the best Civil War film out there. (Sadly, it won’t take much to best the competition!)

RIP, Gore Vidal

Think what you what of Gore Vidal (and I happen to think very highly of him indeed), but there’s no denying the man had personality. He also, famously, had a way with words, although the only book of his I’ve yet read was the Lincoln novel. By that standard, though, I look forward to reading more; it predated Team of Rivals by a few decades, but in subject matter and anecdotes is very similar. I had to remind myself several times, while reading, that this was a work of fiction – so firmly was he planted in the heads of John Hay and David Herold, amongst others. I rarely make time for works of fiction, much less review them, but Vidal’s Lincoln is deserving of a space on any buff’s bookshelf.

Civil War Ballooning Reenactment

T.S. Lowe’s Intrepid flies again!  This is quite the way to reenact!  If I wasn’t terrified of heights I’d make my way down to NY for this.  The tickets are very reasonable considering the expense of running such a project.

Officials at Genesee Country Village & Museum decided that replicating a Civil War balloon that had been christened Intrepid would be an ideal way to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the war.Peter Arnold, the museums president and chief executive officer, said the $400,000 project, which has been partially offset by numerous donations, has triggered intense interest.Starting today and continuing into October, visitors will be invited to board the tethered balloon when weather permits and float several hundred feet above the picturesque landscape, getting a taste of what the first military pilots experienced a century-and-a-half earlier. The cost of 15-minute flights is $10 for museum members and $15 for non-members, charges that are in addition to general admission.

via Civil War air power on display – City & Region – The Buffalo News.

Black Confederates

The Union County Historic Preservation Commission voted unanimously Thursday to approve a plan for a privately funded marker to honor 10 black men, nine of whom were slaves, who eventually received small state pensions for their Civil War service.

It will be one of the few public markers of its kind in the country, and arrives in the midst of state and national commemorations of the Civil War’s sesquicentennial. The granite marker will be placed on a brick walkway at the Old County Courthouse in Monroe in front of the 1910 Confederate monument.

“I’m glad to see Union County is finally stepping out of the Jim Crow era and being all-inclusive of its history,” said Tony Way, the local amateur historian and Sons of Confederate Veterans member who has led the push for the project…

In pension applications, all 10 men were described as “body servants” or bodyguards. They hauled water, carried supplies and helped build forts. Two were wounded.

I have mixed feelings about this kind of news. On the one hand, slaves were brought along to the front lines, and no doubt they made their contributions. Their descendants certainly seem thrilled at the gesture. But such a monument, championed by the SCV, leaves a bitter aftertaste of pandering, particularly when one reads what kind of duties are being honored with bronze. Methink they doth celebrateth too much.

via Union County board approves marker honoring slaves who served in Confederate Army | CharlotteObserver.com & The Charlotte Observer Newspaper.

Worth the Drive

I’ve only been to Illinois once, but loved it. My nostalgia and this news are combining into roadtrip lust. Here’s hoping the Address displayed isn’t as disappointing as the documents in the National Archives, though – mouldy, green, unintelligible paper isn’t as big a draw as you’d expect.

A handwritten manuscript of the Gettysburg Address will be displayed this summer at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield.

The document can be viewed in the museum’s Treasures Gallery from Friday through Sept. 4. It was last displayed for five days in February.

via Abraham Lincoln museum to display Gettysburg Address – Rockford, IL – Rockford Register Star.

RIP, Michael Fellman

Michael Fellman has died. Sad news. Through his excellent book, Inside War, he was responsible for my deep interest in the Missouri guerrilla war. The most fitting tribute to him would be to add his book to your shelf, and its contents to your understanding of the Civil War. It’s a fascinating chapter, and Fellman was a terrific guide.

http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/vancouversun/obituary.aspx?n=michael-fellman&pid=158019198&fhid=5859