Civil War Hospitals - Printable Version +- Lincoln Discussion Symposium (https://rogerjnorton.com/LincolnDiscussionSymposium) +-- Forum: Lincoln Discussion Symposium (/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Other (/forum-10.html) +--- Thread: Civil War Hospitals (/thread-1026.html) Pages: 1 2 |
Civil War Hospitals - BettyO - 07-01-2013 06:06 AM Found this great site online - It's part of the Philadelphia Historical Society: http://www.lcpimages.org/inventories/mower/ These photos are from a Philadelphia area hospital -- and appear remarkably clear and bright -- The kitchen is sparkling clean surprising; these could be reenactors in a modern kitchen they look so spic and span.... Love the row of spittoons down this hospital corridor - RE: Civil War Hospitals - MaddieM - 07-01-2013 03:23 PM (07-01-2013 06:06 AM)BettyO Wrote: Found this great site online - great photos RE: Civil War Hospitals - Gene C - 07-01-2013 05:09 PM Interesting web site. Thanks for sharing. The place looks huge RE: Civil War Hospitals - L Verge - 07-01-2013 06:05 PM Here's a good site about hospitals in Washington, D.C.: http://xroads.virginia.edu/~cap/hospital/whitman.htm RE: Civil War Hospitals - RJNorton - 07-02-2013 04:08 AM Laurie, that article you posted looks to have a reverse image of the photo on e-Bay in which it is claimed Lincoln is being embalmed. That must be Harry P. Cattell preparing Lincoln's remains for public display! Maybe it's just my aging eyes. RE: Civil War Hospitals - BettyO - 07-02-2013 05:12 AM That Photo was of a soldier being embalmed - certainly NOT Lincoln..... RE: Civil War Hospitals - Laurie Verge - 07-02-2013 09:01 AM You mean the President wasn't laid out in a field tent on a slab held up by two barrels? Well, I'll be darned! RE: Civil War Hospitals - RJNorton - 07-02-2013 11:25 AM Betty and Laurie, I think you two might be onto something. I tried to find information on the slab and barrels in Twenty Days, and there's nothing. I think I smell a rat. RE: Civil War Hospitals - J. Beckert - 07-02-2013 11:35 AM It did say Lincoln was laid out on rough boards for the autopsy though, didn't it Roger? RE: Civil War Hospitals - RJNorton - 07-02-2013 11:54 AM True, Joe, but I still think this may be some sort of stratagem designed to fool those of us who are senior citizens. I don't see the bed, sofa or two, bureau, wardrobe, and chairs that were supposed to be in the tent. RE: Civil War Hospitals - Gene C - 07-02-2013 12:17 PM It's actually the governments new "one size fits all" health care final solution. (It's in Vol 6, page 437, article 17, paragraph 8, sub paragraph 3, section 11b. The clarification for above mentioned rule is in Vol 11, page 823, article 5, paragraph 41, sub paragraph 46, section 27b12. Or just wait for the new government's printing office official publication "Obama Care for Dummies- illustrated" RE: Civil War Hospitals - Laurie Verge - 07-02-2013 02:18 PM Gene - You always manage to make me smile. Have you ever considered being a stand-up comedian? RE: Civil War Hospitals - BettyO - 07-02-2013 04:11 PM I've even seen that same image identified as an embalming taking place at Camp Letterman, Gettysburg 1863. RE: Civil War Hospitals - Gene C - 11-17-2017 10:51 AM For an inside look at what it was like to be a nurse at a hospital during the Civil War you might find this book interesting, "Echoes From Hospital and White House. https://archive.org/details/echoesfromhospit00boyd I rarely write long posts, but this is an amazing story and the more I read, the more I appreciate this book, this woman, and others like her. Nurse Pomeroy also served at the White House to Mary and Tad following the death of Willie Lincoln, and following Mary's carriage accident. (Chapter 3) I've read about one third of the book so far. Very interesting. The book has a strong underlying theme of faith in God, which I found encouraging. It is well worth your time to read or at the least, to glance through. This from chapter 4... She writes shortly after the battle of Winchester : " I can assure you we are seeing trouble sometimes. Two hundred and fifty came to us last week, and last night, just at dark, we had sixty poor, wounded, discouraged soldiers, so worn out that as they came up the stairs it seemed as though they would faint away. I cannot describe my feelings when told to arrange my beds for more wounded men, and let those who are getting better sleep on the floor, if there was no other place for them."After they were conducted to the bath room and washed, and had clean clothes, I took them by the hand and told them they had come to a good place, and I would do all for them I could. You never saw such gratitude. They had not heard a kind, womanly word since they left home ; and then the tears ! O, Mrs. F., were you here, your heart would ache, for seeing and assisting to dress the wounds, is very different from hearing about it a long way off. My hands and head and heart are full ; for I have never seen anything like this before. . . ." She writes, later on : " It is just nine months to-day since I set foot into this place of suffering, and I have no desire to return home while I can make myself use full I do not know any one with whom I would exchange situations ; for in spite of the rudeness of his surroundings, there is a charm that invests the poor soldier boy. When once you have enlisted his affection, he makes a confident of you, and before you are aware of it, you are mother, nurse and friend. Then he will listen to reproof and instruction. "I have a little Vermont fellow for an attendant, for whom I feel responsible to God. He is an orphan boy, and loves me dearly. He says I am the only mother he ever knew. He shares with me all my presents, and when, the other day, I gave him a piece of pie, he did not speak for the tears that choked him. He says I am too good to him. He had been cruelly treated before coming here, and is all the more susceptible to kindly influences now. God grant me help to reach his inner feelings, so as to instruct him in becoming a good Christian boy." RE: Civil War Hospitals - Steve - 11-17-2017 11:47 AM I've never heard of the book before, but it seems interesting. I'll check it out. |