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  2. Medicine in the American Civil War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicine_in_the_American...

    A post-war review by the U.S. Army Medical Department found that over 99.6% of surgeries performed by their staff were conducted under some form of general anesthesia. Surgeons preferred chloroform in field hospitals, while ether was more common relegated to general hospitals well beyond the range of fighting due to its explosive nature. [ 44 ]

  3. Hospital Ships of the Sanitary Commission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospital_Ships_of_the...

    These were not the first hospital ships employed by the Civil War governments; previous ships used as hospitals, like the hospital ship CSS St. Philip (formerly the Star of the West) in September 1861 and April 1862, retained patients for long periods of time (30–90 days easily) and stayed on station rarely travelling. The Sanitary Commission ...

  4. List of former United States Army medical units - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_former_United...

    135th Medical Battalion, End of World War II [10] 151st Medical Battalion, End of World War II [10] 168th Medical Battalion [189] Camp Shanks, New York, 30 October 1945; Fort Lewis, Washington, 21 June 1971; 180th Medical Battalion, Camp Miles Standish, Massachusetts, 23 November 1945 [190] 232nd Medical Composite Battalion, Italy, 12 May 1946 [26]

  5. U.S. Ambulance Corps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Ambulance_Corps

    The U.S. Ambulance Corps was a unit of the Union Army during the American Civil War.The Ambulance Corps was initially formed as a unit only within the Army of the Potomac, due to the effort of several Army officials, notably Dr. Jonathan Letterman, medical director of the Army of the Potomac, and William Hammond, the U.S. Surgeon-General.

  6. USS Red Rover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Red_Rover

    Red Rover became the U.S. Navy's first hospital ship, serving the Mississippi Squadron until the end of the American Civil War. Her medical complement included nurses from the Catholic order Sisters of the Holy Cross, the first volunteer females to serve on board a Navy ship. In addition to caring for and transporting sick and wounded men, she ...

  7. Alexander Thomas Augusta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Thomas_Augusta

    Alexander Thomas Augusta (March 8, 1825 – December 21, 1890) was a surgeon, veteran of the American Civil War, and the first African-American professor of medicine in the United States. After gaining his medical education in Toronto, Canada West from 1850 to 1856, he set up a practice there. He returned to the United States shortly before the ...

  8. 1st Medical Brigade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1st_Medical_Brigade

    Ambulance Company 13 of the 1st Sanitary Train was the only American ambulance company operational in the Sommerville sector and furnished litter bearers for duty in the trenches, evacuating patients to Field Hospital 13 (like the ambulance company, an organic unit of the 1st Sanitary Train) and from it to Base Hospital 18 at Bazoilles-sur-Meuse, and to Camp Hospital 1 at Gondrecourt.

  9. John Moore (physician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Moore_(physician)

    Moore was born in Bloomington, Indiana.He attended Indiana University and graduated in 1845. He had graduated from the Medical College of Ohio in Cincinnati in 1844. [1] He scored first place in the internship examination at the Commercial Hospital and Lunatic Asylum of Ohio (chartered in 1821), the hospital whose attending physicians were members of the MCO faculty.