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Making men medical: Impacts of the American Civil War HI31L Week 5
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Page 1: Making men medical: Impacts of the American Civil War HI31L Week 5.

Making men medical: Impacts of the American Civil

War

HI31LWeek 5

Page 2: Making men medical: Impacts of the American Civil War HI31L Week 5.

I. Introduction: context and chronology of the US Civil WarA. Context: A war of two halvesB. Social Movements

II. Military HygieneA. The Sanitarian’s laboratoryB. War as popularizer of

sanitarian principlesIII. Military Medicine, war and the

sciences

Page 3: Making men medical: Impacts of the American Civil War HI31L Week 5.

Chronology of the US Civil War1860 Lincoln elected on a platform including abolitionDec. 1860 Ordinance of Secession (by May 1861 10

states had seceded including Texas)Feb 1861 provisional constitution for Confederate

States of America; Jefferson Davis inauguratedApril 12 1861 First battle, at Fort Sumter, SCApril 19th Blockade of Southern portsSeptember 1862, Emancipation Proclamation issuedJanuary 1863 Emancipation Proclamation takes effect1864 Lincoln re-electedJanuary 1865 Thirteenth Amendment passedApril 1865 Lincoln shot; Lee surrenders at

AppomattoxNovember 1865 Last confederate ship surrenders to

British in Liverpool

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Page 5: Making men medical: Impacts of the American Civil War HI31L Week 5.

620,000 dead (two-thirds to disease);

50,000 amputees; 6 million sick and wounded over the course of the war

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Context: A war of two halves

The dichotomies of the Civil War era:Urban vs. rural

capital vs. raw material

manufacturing vs. agriculture

Federalist vs. States’ rights

immigrant labor vs. slave labor

abolition vs. ‘peculiar institution’

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Social Movements: Sanitarianism• May 1857: first

national ‘quarantine’ convention -- later to become ‘quarantine and sanitary committee’. The key tenet of sanitarians: Disease can be prevented and controlled by hygiene -- by cleaning the environment.

• See John Griscom quote from Feb 26, 1845 letter to Lemuel Shattuck

‘I have lately given 2 lectures on Fresh Air and Ventilation, illustrating experimentally the mechanism & Chemistry of Respiration, and the Influence of foul or respired, air, on Health of mind and Body. They … are calculated to correct many of the great abuses of social life, and attract attention to the necessity of ventilating public rooms, churches, workshops, School houses, Dwellings, etc. etc.. … Lectures more practically useful … to every human being, cannot be given—they touch upon the subject which of all others, is calculated to improve the physical condition, & through that the moral condition, of man in his State of Civilization, and gregariousness.’

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Abolitionism• International

movement• Use of all available

media• Focused on South,

but condemned abuses in North as well

• Close assoc with 1st struggle for women’s rights, purity, single moral standard – all in US profoundly shaped by the Second Great Awakening (1790s-1840s)

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Military Hygiene

A. Civil war as the Sanitarians’ laboratory

–North vs. South as evidence in the case–US Sanitary Committee forced on Army largely by women volunteer groups–1862: Sanitary commission granted power to reorganize the Army medical department; sanitary inspectors; surgeon general to be appointed by merit (but 1864, some powers revoked)

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Military Hygiene

• B. War as great popularizer of sanitarianism

–Soldiers inculcated in sanitarian practices of hygiene–Spread of civilian committees and volunteers: nursing -- already associated strongly with military through Nightingale’s efforts in Scutari during Crimean War. Takes sanitarianism deep into popular culture

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Military Medicine & Sciences of War

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Role of Military in shaping medical and surgical orthodoxy

and standards• Eg: giving all recruited medics specific

standard textsThomson's Conspectus, William J. E. Wilson's Practical and Surgical Anatomy, Thomas Watson's Practice of Physic, Erichsen's Surgery.

• Taking increasing control over prescribing, therapeutics

• Preference given to medical ‘regulars’ as opposed to homeopaths etc

• AND …

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Mandatory creation of

medical records

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Opportunistic Anatomy

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Medical advances

Ether in Wartime Surgery

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Just a few of the many useful websites:

• http://ehistory.osu.edu/osu/sources/

• http://www.civilwarhome.com/civilwarmedicineintro.htm

• http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~sackettmckayhistory/LiesasLineage/MilitaryRecords/PriceRobert.html

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Terms from the readings

• Sanitarianism• Standardization/interchangeability• US Sanitary Commission• Silas Weir Mitchell• ‘the man that was used up’/ ‘the empty sleeve’• B. Franklin Palmer/ A.A. Marks• Patent medicine/ ‘cripple race’• Hysteria• ‘technologies of inscription and of prosthesis’

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Periodization in US History

Current ‘state of the art’ as proposed by NCHSEra 1 Three Worlds Meet (Beginnings to 1620)Era 2 Colonization and Settlement (1585-1763)Era 3 Revolution and New Nation (1754-1820s)Era 4 Expansion and Reform (1801-1861)Era 5 Civil War and Reconstruction (1850-1877)Era 6 Development of Industrial USA (1870-1900)Era 7 The Emergence of Modern America (1890-

1930)Era 8 The Depression and World War II (1929-1945)Era 9 Postwar United States (1945-early 1970s)Era 10 Contemporary United States (1968-present)

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Periodization in US History(Fairly) Traditional Periodization I

Conquest and Settlement: 1492-1620Colonial Era: 1585-1776 (some end at beginnings

of British consolidation c. 1763 Treaty of Paris)Revolutionary Era 1776- c. 1788 (Dec of

Independence to ratification of Constitution)Early Republic: 1788-1823 ( structures of US State

consolidated, Separation of Powers and States’ Rights established;Louisiana Purchase; ends with Monroe Doctrine)

Jacksonian Democracy (?)/Frontier America: c. 1820-c. 1846 (elected 1828; 1831 Trail of Tears; 1845 ‘Manifest Destiny’)

Expansion: 1846-60 (Mexican War 1846-7, Westward Ho/Gold Rush)

Civil War (1861-65)

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Periodization in US History

(Fairly) Traditional Periodization II

Reconstruction (1863-1877)Gilded Age/Robber Barons (1878-1889)Progressive Era (1890-1913)World War I (1914-1918)Jazz Age (1918-1928)Depression and New Deal (1929-1939)World War II (1941-45)Cold War (1945-1991)Civil Rights Era (c. 1954- c.1971)