THE GREAT ARMY OF THE
WOUNDED
THE military hospitals,
convalescent camps, etc., in Washington and its neighborhood,
sometimes contain over fifty thousand sick and wounded men. Every
form of wound (the mere sight of some of them having been known to
make a tolerably hardy visitor faint
away), every kind of malady, like
a long procession, with typhoid fever and diarrhœa at the head as
leaders, are here in steady motion. The soldier’s hospital! how
many sleepless nights, how many women’s tears, how many long and
waking hours and days of suspense, from every one of the Middle,
Eastern, and Western States, have concentrated here! Our own New
York, in the form of hundreds and thousands of her young men, may
consider herself here—Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and all the West
and Northwest the same—and all the New England States the
same.
Upon a few of these hospitals I
have been almost daily calling as a missionary, on my own account,
for the sustenance and consolation of some of the most needy cases
of sick and dying men, for the last two months. One has much to
learn to do good in these places. Great tact is required. These are
not like other hospitals. By far the greatest proportion (I should
say five sixths) of the patients are American young men,
intelligent, of independent spirit, tender feelings, used to a
hardy and healthy life; largely the farmers are represented by
their sons—largely the mechanics and workingmen of the cities. Then
they are soldiers. All these points must be borne in mind.
People through our Northern
cities have little or no idea of the great and prominent feature
which these military hospitals and convalescent camps make in and
around Washington. There are not merely two or three or a dozen,
but some fifty of them, of different degrees of capacity. Some have
a thousand and more patients. The newspapers here find it necessary
to print every day a directory of the hospitals—a long list,
something like what a directory of the churches would be in New
York, Philadelphia, or Boston.
The Government (which really
tries, I think, to do the best and quickest it can for these sad
necessities) is gradually settling down to adopt the plan of
placing the hospitals in clusters of one-story wooden barracks,
with their accompanying tents and sheds for cooking and all needed
purposes. Taking all things into consideration, no doubt these are
best adapted to the purpose; better than using churches and large
public buildings like the Patent office. These sheds now adopted
are long, one-story edifices, sometimes ranged along in a row, with
their heads to the street, and numbered either alphabetically,
Wards A or B, C, D, and so on; or Wards 1, 2, 3, etc. The middle
one will be marked by a flagstaff, and is the office of the
establishment, with rooms for the ward surgeons, etc. One of these
sheds, or wards, will contain sixty cots; sometimes, on an
emergency, they move them close together, and crowd in more. Some
of the barracks are larger, with, of course, more inmates.
Frequently there are tents, more comfortable here than one might
think, whatever they may be down in the army.
Each ward has a ward-master, and
generally a nurse for every ten or twelve men. A ward surgeon has,
generally, two wards—although this varies. Some of the wards have a
woman nurse; the Armory-square wards have some very good ones. The
one in Ward E is one of
the best.
A few weeks ago the vast area of
the second story of that noblest of Washington buildings, the
Patent office, was crowded close with rows of sick, badly wounded,
and dying soldiers. They were placed in three very large
apartments. I went there several times. It was a strange, solemn,
and, with all its features of suffering and death, a sort of
fascinating sight. I went sometimes at night to soothe and relieve
particular cases; some, I found, needed a little cheering up and
friendly consolation at that time, for they went to sleep better
afterwards. Two of the immense apartments are filled with high and
ponderous glass cases crowded with models in miniature of every
kind of utensil, machine, or invention it ever entered into the
mind of man to conceive, and with curiosities and foreign presents.
Between these cases were lateral openings, perhaps eight feet wide,
and quite deep, and in these were placed many of the sick; besides
a great long double row of them up and down through the middle of
the hall. Many of them were very bad cases, wounds and amputations.
Then there was a gallery running above the hall, in which there
were beds also. It was, indeed, a curious scene at night when lit
up. The glass cases, the beds, the sick, the gallery above and the
marble pavement under foot; the suffering, and the fortitude to
bear it in the various degrees; occasionally, from some, the groan
that could not be repressed; sometimes a poor fellow dying, with
emaciated face and glassy eyes, the nurse by his side, the doctor
also there, but no friend, no relative—such were the sights but
lately in the Patent office. The wounded have since been removed
from there, and it is now vacant again.
Of course there are among these
thousands of prostrated soldiers in hospital here all sorts of
individual cases. On recurring to my note-book, I am puzzled which
cases to select to illustrate the average of these young men and
their experiences. I may here say, too, in general terms, that I
could not wish for more candor and manliness, among all their
sufferings, than I find among them.
Take this case in Ward 6,
Campbell hospital: a young man from Plymouth county, Massachusetts;
a farmer’s son, aged about twenty or twenty-one; a soldierly,
American young fellow, but with sensitive and tender feelings. Most
of December and January last he lay very low, and for quite a while
I never expected he would recover. He had become prostrated with an
obstinate diarrhœa: his stomach would hardly keep the least thing
down; he was vomiting half the time. But that was hardly the worst
of it. Let me tell his story—it is but one of thousands.
He had been some time sick with
his regiment in the field, in front, but did his duty as long as he
could; was in the battle of Fredericksburg; soon after was put in
the regimental hospital. He kept getting worse—could not eat
anything they had there; the doctor told him nothing could be done
for him there. The poor fellow had fever also; received (perhaps it
could not be helped) little or no attention; lay on the ground,
getting worse. Toward the latter part of December, very much
enfeebled, he was sent up from the front, from Falmouth station, in
an open platform car (such as hogs are transported upon North), and
dumped with a crowd of others on the boat at Aquia creek, falling
down like a rag where they deposited him, too weak and sick to sit
up or help himself at all. No one spoke to him or assisted him; he
had nothing to eat or drink; was used (amid the great crowds of
sick) either with perfect indifference, or, as in two or three
instances, with heartless
brutality.
On the boat, when night came and
when the air grew chilly, he tried a long time to undo the blankets
he had in his knapsack, but was too feeble. He asked one of the
employees, who was moving around deck, for a moment’s assistance to
get the blankets. The man asked him back if he could not get them
himself. He answered, no, he had been trying for more than half an
hour, and found himself too weak. The man rejoined, he might then
go without them, and walked off. So H. lay chilled and damp on deck
all night, without anything under or over him, while two good
blankets were within reach. It caused him a great injury—nearly
cost him his life.
Arrived at Washington, he was
brought ashore and again left on the wharf, or above it, amid the
great crowds, as before, without any nourishment—not a drink for
his parched mouth; no kind hand had offered to cover his face from
the forenoon sun. Conveyed at last some two miles by the ambulance
to the hospital, and assigned a bed (Bed 49, Ward 6, Campbell
hospital, January and February, 1863), he fell down exhausted upon
the bed. But the ward-master (he has since been changed) came to
him with a growling order to get up: the rules, he said, permitted
no man to lie down in that way with his own clothes on; he must sit
up—must first go to the bath-room, be washed, and have his clothes
completely changed. (A very good rule, properly applied.) He was
taken to the bath-room and scrubbed well with cold water. The
attendants, callous for a while, were soon alarmed, for suddenly
the half-frozen and lifeless body fell limpsy in their hands, and
they hurried it back to the cot, plainly insensible, perhaps
dying.
Poor boy! the long train of
exhaustion, deprivation, rudeness, no food, no friendly word or
deed, but all kinds of upstart airs and impudent, unfeeling
speeches and deeds, from all kinds of small officials (and some big
ones), cutting like razors into that sensitive heart, had at last
done the job. He now lay, at times out of his head but quite
silent, asking nothing of any one, for some days, with death
getting a closer and a surer grip upon him; he cared not, or rather
he welcomed death. His heart was broken. He felt the struggle to
keep up any longer to be useless. God, the world, humanity—all had
abandoned him. It would feel so good to shut his eyes forever on
the cruel things around him and toward him.
As luck would have it, at this
time I found him. I was passing down Ward No. 6 one day about dusk
(4th January, I think), and noticed his glassy eyes, with a look of
despair and hopelessness, sunk low in his thin, pallid-brown young
face. One learns to divine quickly in the hospital, and as I
stopped by him and spoke some commonplace remark (to which he made
no reply), I saw as I looked that it was a case for ministering to
the affection first, and other nourishment and medicines afterward.
I sat down by him without any fuss; talked a little; soon saw that
it did him good; led him to talk a little himself; got him somewhat
interested; wrote a letter for him to his folks in Massachusetts
(to L. H. Campbell, Plymouth county); soothed him down as I saw he
was getting a little too much agitated, and tears in his eyes; gave
him some small gifts, and told him I should come again soon. (He
has told me since that this little visit, at that hour, just saved
him; a day more, and it would have been perhaps too late.)
Of course I did not forget him,
for he was a young fellow to interest any one. He remained very
sick—vomiting much every day, frequent diarrhœa, and also something
like
bronchitis, the doctor said. For
a while I visited him almost every day, cheered him up, took him
some little gifts, and gave him small sums of money (he relished a
drink of new milk, when it was brought through the ward for sale).
For a couple of weeks his condition was uncertain—sometimes I
thought there was no chance for him at all; but of late he is doing
better—is up and dressed, and goes around more and more (February
21) every day. He will not die, but will recover.
The other evening, passing
through the ward, he called me—he wanted to say a few words,
particular. I sat down by his side on the cot in the dimness of the
long ward, with the wounded soldiers there in their beds, ranging
up and down. H. told me I had saved his life. He was in the deepest
earnest about it. It was one of those things that repay a soldiers’
hospital missionary a thousandfold—one of the hours he never
forgets.
A benevolent person, with the
right qualities and tact, cannot, perhaps, make a better investment
of himself, at present, anywhere upon the varied surface of the
whole of this big world, than in these military hospitals, among
such thousands of most interesting young men. The army is very
young—and so much more American than I supposed. Reader, how can I
describe to you the mute appealing look that rolls and moves from
many a manly eye, from many a sick cot, following you as you walk
slowly down one of these wards? To see these, and to be incapable
of responding to them, except in a few cases (so very few compared
to the whole of the suffering men), is enough to make one’s heart
crack. I go through in some cases, cheering up the men,
distributing now and then little sums of money—and, regularly,
letter-paper and envelopes, oranges, tobacco, jellies, etc.,
etc.
Many things invite comment, and
some of them sharp criticism, in these hospitals. The Government,
as I said, is anxious and liberal in its practice toward its sick;
but the work has to be left, in its personal application to the
men, to hundreds of officials of one grade or another about the
hospitals, who are sometimes entirely lacking in the right
qualities. There are tyrants and shysters in all positions, and
especially those dressed in subordinate authority. Some of the ward
doctors are careless, rude, capricious, needlessly strict. One I
found who prohibited the men from all enlivening amusements; I
found him sending men to the guard-house for the most trifling
offence. In general, perhaps, the officials— especially the new
ones, with their straps or badges—put on too many airs. Of all
places in the world, the hospitals of American young men and
soldiers, wounded in the volunteer service of their country, ought
to be exempt from mere conventional military airs and etiquette of
shoulder-straps. But they are not exempt.
W. W.
From the New York Times, February
26, 1863.
LIFE AMONG FIFTY THOUSAND
SOLDIERS
OUR Brooklyn people, not only
from having so many hundreds of their own kith and kin, and almost
everybody some friend or acquaintance, here in the clustering
military hospitals of Washington, would doubtless be glad to get
some account of these
establishments, but also to
satisfy that compound of benevolence and generosity which marks
Brooklyn, I have sometimes thought, more than any other city in the
world. A military hospital here in Washington is a little city by
itself, and contains a larger population than most of the
well-known country towns down in the Queens and Suffolk county
portions of Long Island. I say one of the Government hospitals here
is a little city in itself, and there are some fifty of these
hospitals in the District of Columbia alone. In them are collected
the tens of thousands of sick and wounded soldiers, the legacies of
many a bloody battle and of the exposure of two years of camp life.
I find these places full of significance. They have taken up my
principal time and labor for some months past. Imagine a long,
one-story wooden shed, like a short, wide ropewalk, well
whitewashed; then cluster ten or a dozen of these together, with
several smaller sheds and tents, and you have the soldiers’
hospital as generally adopted here. It will contain perhaps six or
seven hundred men, or perhaps a thousand, and occasionally more
still. There is a regular staff and a sub-staff of big and little
officials. Military etiquette is observed, and it is getting to
become very stiff. I shall take occasion, before long, to show up
some of this ill-fitting nonsense. The harvest is large, the
gleaners few. Beginning at first with casual visits to these
establishments to see some of the Brooklyn men, wounded or sick,
here, I became by degrees more and more drawn in, until I have now
been for many weeks quite a devotee to the business—a regular
self-appointed missionary to these thousands and tens of thousands
of wounded and sick young men here, left upon Government hands,
many of them languishing, many of them dying. I am not connected
with any society, but go on my own individual account, and to the
work that appears to be called for. Almost every day, and
frequently in the evenings, I visit, in this informal way, one
after another of the wards of a hospital, and always find cases
enough where I can be of service. Cases enough, do I say? Alas!
there is, perhaps, not one ward or tent, out of the seven or eight
hundred now hereabout filled with sick, in which I am sure I might
not profitably devote every hour of my life to the abstract work of
consolation and sustenance for its suffering inmates. And indeed,
beyond that, a person feels that in some one of these crowded wards
he would like to pick out two or three cases and devote himself
wholly to them. Meanwhile, however, to do the best that is
permitted, I go around, distributing myself and the contents of my
pockets and haversack in infinitesimal quantities, with faith that
nearly all of it will, somehow or other, fall on good ground. In
many cases, where I find a soldier “dead broke” and pretty sick, I
give half a tumbler of good jelly. I carry a good-sized jar to a
ward, have it opened, get a spoon, and taking the head nurse in
tow, I go around and distribute it to the most appropriate cases.
To others I give an orange or an apple; to others some spiced
fruits; to others a small quantity of pickles. Many want tobacco: I
do not encourage any of the boys in its use, but where I find they
crave it I supply them. I always carry some, cut up in small plugs,
in my pocket. Then I have commissions: some New York or
Connecticut, or other soldier, will be going home on sick leave, or
perhaps
discharged, and I must fit him
out with good new undershirt, drawers, stockings, etc.
But perhaps the greatest welcome
is for writing paper, envelopes, etc. I find these always a rare
reliance. When I go into a new ward, I always carry two or three
quires of paper and a good lot of envelopes, and walk up and down
and circulate them around to those who desire them. Then some will
want pens, pencils, etc. In some hospitals there is quite a plenty
of reading matter; but others, where it is needed, I supply.
By these and like means one comes
to be better acquainted with individual cases, and so learns every
day peculiar and interesting character, and gets on intimate and
soon affectionate terms with noble American young men; and now is
where the real good begins to be done, after all. Here, I will
egotistically confess, I like to flourish. Even in a medical point
of view it is one of the greatest things; and in a surgical point
of view, the same. I can testify that friendship has literally
cured a fever, and the medicine of daily affection, a bad wound. In
these sayings are the final secret of carrying out well the rôle of
a hospital missionary for our soldiers, which I tell for those who
will understand them.
As I write, I have lying before
me a little discarded note-book, filled with memoranda of things
wanted by the sick—special cases. I use up one of these little
books in a week. See from this sample, for instance, after walking
through a ward or two: Bed 53 wants some liquorice; Bed
6—erysipelas—bring some raspberry vinegar to make a cooling drink,
with water; Bed 18 wants a good book—a romance; Bed 25—a manly,
friendly young fellow,
H. D. B., of the Twenty-seventh
Connecticut, an independent young soul—refuses money and eatables,
so I will bring him a pipe and tobacco, for I see he much enjoys a
smoke; Bed 45—sore throat and cough—wants horehound candy; Bed 11,
when I come again, don’t forget to write a letter for him; etc. The
wants are a long and varied list: some need to be humored and
forgotten, others need to be especially remembered and obeyed. One
poor German, dying—in the last stage of consumption—wished me to
find him, in Washington, a German Lutheran clergyman, and send him
to him; I did so. One patient will want nothing but a toothpick,
another a comb, and so on. All whims are represented, and all the
States. There are many New York State soldiers here; also
Pennsylvanians. I find, of course, many from Massachusetts,
Connecticut, and all the New England States, and from the Western
and Northwestern States. Five sixths of the soldiers are young
men.
Among other cases of young men
from our own city of Brooklyn I have encountered and have had much
to do with in hospital here, is John Lowery, wounded, and arm
amputated, at Fredericksburg. I saw this young fellow down there
last December, immediately after the battle, lying on a blanket on
the ground, the stump of his arm bandaged, but he not a bit
disheartened. He was soon afterward sent up from the front by way
of Aquia creek, and has for the past three months been in the
Campbell hospital here, in Ward 6, on the gain slowly but steadily.
He thinks a great deal of his physician here, Dr. Frank Hinkle, and
as some fifty other soldiers in the ward do the same, and bear
testimony in their hearty gratitude, and medical and surgical
imprisonment, to the quality of Dr. H., I think he deserves
honorable mention in this letter to the people of our
city—especially as another Brooklyn soldier in Ward 6, Amos H.
Vliet, expresses the same feeling of obligation to the doctor for
his faithfulness and kindness. Vliet and Lowery both belong to that
old war regiment whose flag has flaunted through more than a score
of hot-contested battles, the Fifty-first New York, Colonel Potter;
and it is to be remembered that no small portion of
the fame of this old veteran
regiment may be claimed near home, for many of her officers and men
are from Brooklyn. The friends of these two young soldiers will
have a chance to talk to them soon in Brooklyn. I have seen a good
deal of Jack Lowery, and I find him, and heard of him on the field,
as a brave, soldierly fellow. Amos Vliet, too, made a first- rate
soldier. He has had frozen feet pretty bad, but now better.
Occasionally I meet some of the Brooklyn Fourteenth. In Ward E of
Armory hospital I found a member of Company C of that regiment,
Isaac Snyder; he is now acting as nurse there, and makes a very
good one. Charles Dean, of Co. H of the same regiment, is in Ward A
of Armory, acting as ward-master. I also got very well acquainted
with a young man of the Brooklyn Fourteenth who lay sick some time
in Ward F; he has lately got his discharge and gone home. I have
met with others in the H-street and Patent-office hospitals.
Colonel Fowler, of the Fourteenth, is in charge, I believe, of the
convalescent camp at Alexandria. Lieutenant- Colonel Debevoise is
in Brooklyn, in poor health, I am sorry to say. Thus the Brooklyn
invalids are scattered around.
Off in the mud, a mile east of
the Capitol, I found the other day, in Emory hospital there, in
Ward C, three Brooklyn soldiers—Allen V. King, Michael Lally, and
Patrick Hennessy; none of them, however, are very sick.