February 5 About one o\u27clock Dr. Marsh came to say that in ward 5 Dr. Hartsuff was to amputate the leg of a man who had be shot in the knee; the joint is shattered and discharges profusely.; he is so weak that he will die unless relieved of the drain. All the surgeons and cadets wer...
Tarnished Scalpels tells the story of 50 Union doctors who, for various reasons, faced military cour...
Critics of Civil War medical practices tend to isolate them from all other aspects of the war and ev...
In early 1861, a Confederate soldier named James Edward Hanger waited on the ground to die. Minutes ...
Saving Lives On Battlefields: Jonathan Letterman’s Innovations During the Civil War The American Civ...
A Reexamination of Civil War Medecine Currently scholarship has surged regarding the Civil War era’s...
“The avocation of a physician is one which of all others, imperatively demands the exercise of indep...
Union surgeon James Dana Benton witnessed firsthand the suffering and death brought about by the gha...
Looking back on the practices of Civil War Americans, many people tend to believe the Civil War was ...
By bridging two frequently overlooked subjects in Civil War historiography, medicine and the conflic...
Prostheses for Amputated Limbs Guy Hasegawa is a well-respected historian of Civil War medicine and ...
Military medicine Hospitals shaped the creation of a public health system The American Civil War i...
Prior to the American Civil War, doctors in the United States had difficulty obtaining cadavers for ...
After losing both arms in a gunnery accident aboard the USS Rhode Island in 1863 and being told he w...
In 1893, two Philadelphia doctors from the Mütter Museum sent surveys to Civil War amputee veterans ...
Bullet Wound Amputation Laura Flaherty, Depts. of Anthropology and History, with Dr. Bernard Means, ...
Tarnished Scalpels tells the story of 50 Union doctors who, for various reasons, faced military cour...
Critics of Civil War medical practices tend to isolate them from all other aspects of the war and ev...
In early 1861, a Confederate soldier named James Edward Hanger waited on the ground to die. Minutes ...
Saving Lives On Battlefields: Jonathan Letterman’s Innovations During the Civil War The American Civ...
A Reexamination of Civil War Medecine Currently scholarship has surged regarding the Civil War era’s...
“The avocation of a physician is one which of all others, imperatively demands the exercise of indep...
Union surgeon James Dana Benton witnessed firsthand the suffering and death brought about by the gha...
Looking back on the practices of Civil War Americans, many people tend to believe the Civil War was ...
By bridging two frequently overlooked subjects in Civil War historiography, medicine and the conflic...
Prostheses for Amputated Limbs Guy Hasegawa is a well-respected historian of Civil War medicine and ...
Military medicine Hospitals shaped the creation of a public health system The American Civil War i...
Prior to the American Civil War, doctors in the United States had difficulty obtaining cadavers for ...
After losing both arms in a gunnery accident aboard the USS Rhode Island in 1863 and being told he w...
In 1893, two Philadelphia doctors from the Mütter Museum sent surveys to Civil War amputee veterans ...
Bullet Wound Amputation Laura Flaherty, Depts. of Anthropology and History, with Dr. Bernard Means, ...
Tarnished Scalpels tells the story of 50 Union doctors who, for various reasons, faced military cour...
Critics of Civil War medical practices tend to isolate them from all other aspects of the war and ev...
In early 1861, a Confederate soldier named James Edward Hanger waited on the ground to die. Minutes ...