Medical Histories of Confederate Generals

Передняя обложка
Kent State University Press, 1995 - Всего страниц: 297
From official records, personal letters, and postwar memoirs, Jack D. Welsh, M.D., has compiled the medical histories of 425 Confederate generals. The generals' early military experience, at West Point and in Florida, Mexico, or on the western frontier, meant that hundreds of them were exposed to and immunized against the diseases that killed so many soldiers in the Civil War, while many also were wounded or lost limbs. In addition, several survived street fights, duels, and shooting accidents-all before the war. Throughout the Civil War, most officers fought in spite' of illness or wounds and spent little time in hospitals. Welsh mentions this fact not to point out bravery, but rather to illustrate the prevailing attitudes toward disease and injuries. Ninety-six Confederate generals died during the war; half of those who survived lived to age 70 or older. Welsh does not attempt to analyze the effects of an individual's medical problems on a battle or the war, but whenever possible provides information about factors that may have contributed to the wound, injury, or illness, and the outcome. He also details the immediate care, logistics of transportation, timing of operations, and the remedies used or recommended by the physicians, when such data is available. This insight into the lives of men who often paid a high price for the Confederacy will prove fascinating for physicians, historians of medicine, and students of the Civil War.

Результаты поиска по книге

Избранные страницы

Содержание

Medical Histories
1
A Sequence of Medical Incidents during the Civil War
245
Glossary
261

Другие издания - Просмотреть все

Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения

Популярные отрывки

Стр. 19 - On the 3d October, 1864, Gen. Beauregard was assigned to the nominal command of two military departments and the troops therein, known as the Department of Tennessee and Georgia, and the Department of Alabama, Mississippi, and East Louisiana. He immediately proceeded to the West, joined Hood's army, and then issued an earnest appeal to the people to come forward, with renewed efforts, to drive the enemy from the South. In this, his last field of service, Gen. Beauregard was unfortunate ; his name...
Стр. 263 - ... a sudden shock or other impression arresting the cerebral functions but causing no visible alteration in the brain.
Стр. 221 - ... expected every moment to fall dead. The shock from the explosion of the shell was very severe, yet the tearing away of my leg was accompanied by neither pain nor the loss of much blood. In addition to the loss of my foot I received another wound on my other leg which was rather remarkable. I had a cut below the knee about four inches long and down to the bone, as smooth as if it had been cut with a sharp knife, yet neither my pants nor underclothing were torn. It was so smooth a cut that when...
Стр. 262 - ... by severe pain, faintness, and anxiety, occurring in paroxysms: connected with disorders of the pneumogastric and sympathetic nerves and their branches; and frequently associated with organic disease of the heart.] ANTERIOR SUPERIOR SPiNOUS PROCESS The boney projection from the anterior portion of a spinal vertebrae.
Стр. 262 - Deficiency of blood in quantity, either general or local ; also, deficiency of the most important constituents of blood, particularly albuminous substances and red corpuscles.
Стр. 273 - This poison was supposed to be the cause of all the types of intermittent and remittent fevers, and of the degeneration of the blood and tissues resulting from long residence in places where this poison was generated.] MALLEOLUS The rounded projection on either side of the ankle joint.
Стр. 266 - Fracture of the orbit or of the bones that support the floor of the orbit. conjunctiva The delicate membrane that lines the eyelids and covers the exposed surface of the eye.
Стр. 265 - ... in this respect barren. Doubtless climatic and meteorological influences very materially affect the susceptibility of the human subject to disease, and consequently we find that simple cholera, like the malignant form of the malady, is apt to prevail as an epidemic in moist or wet seasons of the year, and especially among people whose bodies...
Стр. 92 - Wellman, Giant in Gray: A Biography of Wade Hampton of South Carolina (New York, 1949).

Ссылки на эту книгу

Библиографические данные