Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Medical Department #39 - Body Bags and Burial Cases

Below you will find my "Medical Department" from the July 2011 issue of The Civil War News. Enjoy!



SIX FEET UNDER
By James M. Schmidt
The Civil War News

“Medical Department” – July 2011




“In the present condition of the country, when the fatal calamities of war render it a duty incumbent on fathers, mothers, wives, sisters and brothers to seek their dead upon the battlefield and to bring home for burial the remains of their kindred, any invention which will tend to ameliorate these afflictions and assist in the performance of this sad duty is worthy of special notice.”Scientific American, February 28, 1863



The Civil War proved to be a camp-to-grave proposition for more than 600,000 soldiers and sailors, North and South. Though the mission of military surgeons was to heal the living, they had an interest in corpses for a number of reasons, including: the postmortem examinations of dead soldiers – either from wounds or disease – allowed them to continue the study of anatomy first begun in medical school; the chemistry and biology of decomposition almost certainly appealed to their scientific minds; army regulations required a copious amount of paperwork on men who died in their care.



While innovations and inventions in the military arts have received significant attention in the Civil War literature, less attention has been paid to wartime improvements in the implements required for burial. In fact, inventors met that grim reality with dozens of improvements in coffins, caskets, biers, and embalming tools.



One of the more interesting inventions was designed for the battlefield: Dr. Thomas Holmes’ United States Patent No. 39, 291, “Improvement in Receptacles for Dead Bodies” (a rather fancy name for a “body bag,” and yet it was an invention ahead of its time). Holmes, of Washington, D.C., declared that his object was:


“…to facilitate the carrying of badly-wounded dead bodies hurriedly away that could not otherwise be quickly removed for the want of proper conveyances, or difficulty to procure boxes or coffins for removing the dead, as the boxes or coffins cannot be so easily transported or handled on the field of battle.”


The “receptacle” was made of india-rubber, oval-shaped, about six feet in length and about two and a half feet in width. The top was funnel-shaped, “so that a dead body may easily be thrust in at the top.” The bag had two handles, “so that the body can be immediately lifted up and carried off…to be transported safely to any desired place to be inclosed in a box or coffin.” A tube was attached near to the center of the bag receptacle to accommodate deodorants or preservatives, “until received by its friends to be...prepared for interment,” or embalmed.


Indeed, the very same Dr. Thomas Holmes - an 1845 graduate of the “College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University,” in New York - is considered the “Father of American Embalming” for his experiments in improving the preservation of cadavers used for anatomical studies and in preparing bodies for burial. He was the premiere embalming surgeon of the Civil War era, reportedly preparing more than 4000 soldiers for burial, including the first prominent Union casualty of the war, Col. Elmer Ellsworth.


Still, not everyone could afford embalming. As Valentine Mott - one of the foremost surgeons of the era – declared:


“…in times like the present, when so many are bereft of one or more members of their family by the calamities of a horrid war . . . .the rich and the titled can afford to be embalmed, but the commoner must be pitched into the pit unheeded and unknown.”


For that reason, Mott praised the “rare inventive skill” manifested in Dr. G. W. Scollay’s “Air-Tight Deodorizing Burial Case” (U. S. Patent No. 34,700). Scollay, of St. Louis, held several patents related to undertaking. Scientific American magazine featured the case in one of its wartime issues. The long article outlined — rather graphically — the chemical and biological processes of decomposition, described the invention, and featured an engraving of the case with a fallen soldier as its occupant.


The mechanics of the innovative burial case received the approbation of the Western Sanitary Commission (which performed numerous and diligent experiments to test its utility) which appreciated the “safer, cheaper, and better method of preserving the remains of deceased persons without burial, for transportation to friends at a distance an object greatly desired by those having relations killed in battle, or dying in the military hospitals.”



The editors of Scientific American agreed, and declared, “Especially at the present time is its introduction to be desired, when desolation and grief exist in almost every home in the land.”


*


On a related note:



It is now summer and vacation season; many families – including many Civil War enthusiasts – will be making trips to battlefields and museums. If you are in my area – near Houston, Texas – consider a visit to the National Museum of Funeral History (NMFH, http://www.nmfh.org/).



I had the great pleasure of visiting this most interesting institution recently and had a terrific time. (see the photos from visit here!)


The museum – which opened its doors in October 1992 – fulfilled the aspirations of founder Robert L. Waltrip, who had long dreamed of an institution that would educate the public and preserve the rich heritage of the funeral industry. The NMFH is a non-profit 501 (c)(3) organization and all profits raised by donations, admissions, and gift shop sales go towards the operation of the Museum.


With over 35,000 square feet of exhibition space, the NMFH is the largest educational center on funeral heritage in the United States and perhaps the world. The museum boasts several permanent exhibits, including a recreated 1900s casket factory (with original casket factory artifacts), a display related to the Meso-American holiday of Dias de los Muertos (“Day of the Dead”), an 1860 German "Glaswagen" Funeral Coach (among other hearses), a display of “fantasy coffins” (including an airliner, animals, and a canoe), an exhibit dedicated to Papal funerals (featuring one-of-a-kind items), and other funeral heritage artifacts.


Of special interest was a wonderful “Civil War Embalming Exhibit” featuring the story of the afore-mentioned Dr. Thomas Holmes!


As experts in their field, the staff of the NMFH has been a leading consultant to many motion picture and television production companies as well as well as national and international print media. They have supplied “props” from the early days of the undertaker to the modern funeral home to “Kill Bill: Vol 1,” “Gangs of New York,” “Six Feet Under,” documentaries produced by A&E and Discovery, and other productions.



*


Finally:The grief of families who lost a loved one during the war did not end with the funeral, if they were even able to have one. In a previous column (April 2008, here) I interviewed Bernadette L. Atkins - writer, lecturer, photographer, collector, and expert - about 19th-century mourning rituals.


Bernadette is pleased to announce that her terrific booklet on the subject, Widow’s Weeds and Weeping Veils: Mourning Rituals in 19th Century America, was revised in 2010 and is available through http://battlefieldsandbeyondbooks.com/.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Civil War Pension and Disability Ephemera from the "Schmidt Collection" #8 - A Pennsylvania Peddler

As a reminder, here are links to previous pension/disability ephemera posts:

#1 - Horse Thieves and Deserters (here)
#2 - Red Tape (here)
#3 - Pennsylvanian Inquires After His Dead Son (here)

#4 - Ohio Military Home (here)

#5 - Squirrel Hunters (here)

#6 - "The Buddy System" (here)

#7 - A Dependent Mother (here)


And now on to the latest installment of Civil War pension/disability items in my collection...


Among the b
arriers facing disabled veterans of the Civil War was in securing a living by manual labor, especially if their disability prevented them from doing so.

Some disabled veterans sought to make a living by peddling (I have written about that before, here). In many states, peddling required a license; however, many states also had laws on the books waiving the license fee for honorably discharged soldiers whose disabilities prevented them from securing other work.


Interestingly, some states and counties still allow for this (!) - as an example, see this page from the Duchess County (N
ew York) website (here) describing how peddling fees are waived for veterans of wars and conflicts since WWII.

Indeed, there is a lot more to the story of peddling and Civil War veterans - a veritable tangle of politics, bureaucracy, law, and medicine - and it will be the subject of my next "Medical Department" column in Civil War News.


Until, then, enjoy the images and transcripts below from an item in my collection detailing an Ohio veteran whose Pennsylvania peddling fees were waived.


(An added benefit - I learned a new word: "Prothonota
ry"...there are sereval specific definitions, but generally it means "the first notary of the Court. The Prothonotary is the keeper of the civil records for the court system.")

Document #1


Bedford, PA April 9, 1890


This is to certify that I have carefully examined Gordon Hammer late a private of Co. E. 13th Ohio Cavalry and find that he is unable to procure his living by manual labor and entitled to a peddlers license under the laws of Pennsylvania.


C. P. Calhoun, M.D.

Pres't Pension Examiners, Bedford Co.


Document #2

Bedford County (SS?)

Gordon Hammer being duly sworn says that he is the bona fide owner of the goods wares and merchandise in hi
s own right which he proposes to peddle hawk and vend and that he will not engage to sell the same for any other person or persons.

Sworn and subscribed before me this 9th day April 1890

Gordon Hammer
Josiah Amos (iIllegible...possibly abbreviation for Prothonotary)

To the Honorable the Judges of the Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace in and for the County of Bedford

The petition of Gordon Hammer respectfully represents that he is an honorably discharged soldier of the United States; served in the war of 1861 for the suppression of the rebellion; that he is a resident of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and a native thereof; that on account of diseases contracted whilst in the service aforesaid he is unable to procure his living by manual labor; that he herewith exhibits a certificate from Dr.
C. P. Calhoun an Examining Surgeon of the United States setting forth; that said Hammer is unable to procure his living by manual labor; also his affidavit to be filed in the office of the Prothonotary setting forth that he is the bona fide owner of the goods wares and merchandise in his own right which he proposes to hawk peddle and vend and that he will (not?) engage to sell or peddle the same for any other person or persons whomsoever.

He therefore prays that a license may be issued to him to hawk peddle and vend any goods wares and merchandise within the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

And he will ever pray and etc.

Gordon Hammer

Bedford County (SS?)

Gordon Hammer being duly sworn says the facts set forth in the foregoing petition are correct and true.


Sworn and subscribed
9th April 1890
Josiah Amos
Prothonotary

Gordon Hammer
GH



Thursday, June 16, 2011

Galveston Research Summary #5 - Digital Resources at Rice University!

"I have now to chronicle an event which will be remembered by us all while we live..." - Alexander Hobbs, 42d Massachusetts, January 1, 1863

Previous "Galveston Research Summaries" can be found below:

#1 - Dissent, Sedition, and Confederate Secret Police (here)
#2 - Ursuline Sisters (here)
#3 - The Pearce Civil War Museum and Collection (here)
#4 - New Orleans Archdiocese Records a the Archives of the University of Notre Dame (here)
Summary of Galveston/Civil War Research Project (here)

And now, for the latest in Galveston Research Summaries (!):

The mission of the Woodson Research Center of the Fondren Library of Rice University in Houston, TX is:

...to support the institutional, research and public service programs of the University. The Center collects, organizes, preserves and describes official records of the University, special collections of rare books and manuscripts; it makes these materials available for Rice faculty, students and alumni, as well as local, national and international resea
rchers via exhibitions, lectures, and other public events, and by publishing print and web-based materials highlighting the department's primary source collections. The Woodson Research Center’s strong service tradition and commitment to technology enhances access to and aids in the preservation of rare materials, and facilitates long-distance study and teaching.

The Woodson maintains a significant collection of material related to the Civil War and slavery, and a good amount of the material has been digitized and is available online (here). The items include letters, diaries, passes, scrapbooks, and other documents from Union and Confederate soldiers and civilians.

Of particular interest for my research on Galveston and the Civil War are several items, including the:

Alexander Hobbs U.S. Civil War Diary (here) - Hobbs was a private in the 42d Massachusetts Infantry; the diary describes the author's volunteer service during the U.S. Civil War, including the Battle of Galveston, a prison stay in Houston, and patrol duty in New Orleans. (Although not part of the digital collection, the Woodson also holds Hobbs' Bible from his days as a soldier).

The digital collection includes diary page images as well as a transcript of the diary contents.

Andrew Lang, a Ph.D. student in History at Rice, has written an excllent lesson plan for teachers and students utilizing the digital diary here.


Also of interest to me are the:

Neumann Family Papers, 1850-1955 (here) -Forty letters, chiefly to Louisa (Neumann) Bering, a resident of Houston, Tex., from her brothers and sisters, including letters from her brother, Emil Neumann, describing his service in the Confederate Army, stationed at Fort Eagle Grove (Fort Moore) and Galveston, Tex.; together with clippings and photos. Includes material relating to land in Texas, Bering family, and Little Rock, Ark., during the Civil War.

Ten of the 40 letters are digitized, including two of special interest to my project, noted above:

An early January 1863 letter (here) from Emil Neumann, a Confederate soldier, to his sister Louisa Neumann, from Galveston. The letter describes a battle in which Emil was in charge of a cannon "near the brick warehouse" on the Strand. He witnessed the capture of the vessel "Harriet Lane" and the escape of her companion ships, the "Orosco" and the "Clifton".

Another early January 1863 letter (here) in which Emil Neumann describes five vessels lying off Galveston Island that shot "over one hundred shots into town", as well as the execution of a deserter.

Many thanks to the Woodson Research Center for making this material available!

I certainly encourage other researchers to consult the digital collection (here) and the full collection (here) for material that might be useful to their interests!

The Woodson also maintains a blog (here) where they update readers on newly available digitized material!

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Swaddled in History! (The Multi-Generation Story of My Baptismal Clothes)

[Cross-posted from other blog: Notre Dame in the Civil War]

I've had the great privilege of being interviewed by bloggers Donald Thompson (here and here) and Robert Redd (here) in which I was able to explain from whence my interest in history, generally, and Civil War history, especially, come.

I was pondering lately, though, why I would have more than an interest it, and rather a passion.

Perhaps it's because I was literally "swaddled in history" almost from birth as witnessed in the clipping below from the June 16, 1964 edition of the Hays (KS) Daily News:

Off and On Main Street
By L. M.

It is too bad this baby was unaware of the distinction which surrounded his baptism but he will doubtless be reminded of it many times when he reaches the age of understanding for it is a set of most unusual circumstances which will be of interest to readers in this area.

James Michael Schmidt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Terrance C. Schmidt was baptized at Most Pure Heart of Mary Catholic Church in Topeka on May 31. Grandparents of the baby are Mr. and Mrs. Alvin M.Weigel of Pratt and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer C. Schmidt of Hays.

For his baptism James wore a hand crocheted cap which had been worn by four generations and a hand sewn dress which had been worn by three generations of his family. The cap was first worn by James F. Giebler of Severin, 72 years ago at his baptism on July 10. The dress was made by Mrs. James F. Giebler and will be 49 years old in August. It was first worn by their eldest daughter. The cap and dress have been worn at baptisms by twelve children, 39 grandchildren and one great-grandchild of Mr. and Mrs. Giebler and it has been worn in Texas, Nebraska, Colorado, Florida and many parts of Kansas.

The four generations wearing the cap are: James F. Giebler, maternal great grandfather, Mrs. Alvin Weigel of Pratt, maternal grandmother ,Mrs. Terrance C. Schmidt of Topeka, mother, and James Michael, son of Mrs. Schmidt.

So, there you go! Maybe that's where I get my passion for history!

Do some quick math and you'll see that the cap is now 119 years old and the gown is now 96 years old!

The cap and gown are still in our family...my daughter was the fifth generation to wear it, in 1986!

Monday, June 13, 2011

Patent Medicine Receipts,Invoices, and Billheads - 1848-1900

Time to share some more items from my collection of 19th-century patent medicine ephemera!

Here are links to (just) some other items:

Dr. T. B. Cox's Stomach Restorative (here)
Subway Sandwiches and Victorian Painkillers (here)
Chamberlain's Colic and Flatulence Remedy (here)
Politics and Elections - Quack Medicine Style! (here)
Poor Man's Friend and Holloway's Ointment (here)
Civil War Era Patent Medicine Almanacs (here, here, and here)
That's What She Said! (Civil War Style) (here)
The Best Lincoln Book You've Never Read? (here)
Dr. Blosser's Catarrh Cigarettes (here)
Berry's Barb Beater (here)
and more!

Today I offer some patent medicine receipts, bill heads, and invoices...they can actually be quite instructive...they give an idea of the variety of medicines available...when raw ingredients are listed among invoices, prices can be compared across time periods and geography, etc...when a particular industry buys drugs, one gets an idea of the kind of therapies they require...and more!

Enjoy!

Below:

1) 1848 handwritten receipt of payment f
rom Dr. S[eth] Arnold's Balsam from a "Rev. P. Start"...surely, the trusted minister was also a trusted man of medicine in the village?











2) 1861 invoice from P. D. Orvis's Wholesale Drug House, including an order for Herrick's Pills, Ayer's Pills, and other raw ingr
edients (including Bermuda arrow root)






















3) 1865 invoice and receipt of payment to and from Sterling Iron/Railway and the P. Schieffelin Drug House...note the purchase of Tobias Horse Liniment!
Also note the revenue stamps on the invoice and the receipt!






































4) And my favorite, a 1900 "Lincoln Tea Co." receipt...you can read more about Lincoln Tea in previous posts (here, here, and here).


Monday, June 6, 2011

Galveston Research Summary #4 - Letters to New Awlins!

Previous "Galveston Research Summaries" can be found below:

#1 - Dissent, Sedition, and Confederate Secret Police (here)
#2 - Ursuline Sisters (here)
#3 - The Pearce Civil War Museum and Collection (here)
Summary of Galveston/Civil War Research Project (here)

And now, for the latest in Galveston Research Summaries (!):

Not surprisingly, the kind, expert, and enthusiastic assistance of the Archives of the University of Notre Dame (AUND) was criticial to my researching and writing of my recent book, Notre Dame and the Civil War: Marching Onward to Victory (The History Press, 2010).

Likewise, I've mentioned before (here) interesting connections between the Notre Dame/Civil War project and my current Galveston (TX)/Civil War writing and research project, especially the involvement of Catholic sister-nurses in both cases.

As it turns out, the University of Notre Dame Archives also has some great material to support my Galveston/Civil War project, and - perhaps to many readers of this blog - unexpectedly!

It's no surprise that a primary mission of the AUND is to collect, preserve, and make accessible the permanent historical records of the University of Notre Dame...however, from the late 1800s, the University has also committed itself to documenting the history of the Catholic Church in the United States; to that end, the University Archives has acquired historical material and papers from the bishops of Baltimore, Bardstown-Louisville, Boston, Cincinnati, Chicago, Vincennes-Indianapolis and many other Sees.

Among the diocesan papers they maintain are those of the Archdiocese of New Orleans (La.), including more than 34 linear feet (!) of records from 1786-1897.

So...what does this have to do with my Galveston/Civil War research project?

The connection lies in Bishop Jean Marie Odin (1800-1870). Odin was the first bishop of Galveston (1847) but just as the Civil War was starting, he was named as the Archbishop of New Orleans. You can read more about Bishop Odin at the "Handbook of Texas Online", specifically his entry here.

Odin was beloved by the people of Texas (especially Galveston) and many persons from Galveston maintained a steady correspondence with Bishop Odin over the course of the war.

Fortunately, to help researchers, the AUND has made available online its "Calendar" of correspondence, which serves an excellent finding aid, with summaries of the correspondence.

With the Calendar as a guide, I've been able to secure copies of more than a dozen letters written from Galvestonians to Bishop Odin in New Orleans during the war from AUND, although there are many more. From what I can tell, these have not been used in the Galveston/Civil War literature to-date, and I am confident that the information I'll glean from them will 1) make the book all the more interesting and 2) add to the scholarship of Galveston and the Civil War.


I would encourage other Civil War researchers to take advantage of the AUND in more "unexpected" ways! There are some GEMS in there!

Sunday, June 5, 2011

"Six Feet Under" - Visit to National Museum of Funeral History - #4 - Papal Funerals





My previous posts on my recent visit to the National Museum of Funeral History can be found here:


#1 - Overview (here)
#2 - Presidential Funerals and Lincoln Funeral Train (here)
#3 - 19th Century mourning and Civil War embalming (here)

This final set of photos pertains to one of the newest and most impressive exhibits: Celebrating the Lives and Deaths of the Popes.

You can visit t
he online exhibit here and see a good video tour via YouTube here:



Enjoy the photos below!

















Saturday, June 4, 2011

"Six Feet Under" - Visit to National Museum of Funeral History - #3 - Civil War

My previous posts on my recent visit to the National Museum of Funeral History can be found here:

#1 - Overview (here)
#2 - Presidential Funerals and Lincoln Funeral Train (here)

Of special interest were exhibits the Museum had on 19th-century mourning practices and Civil War embalming.

Here are photos of exhibits on:

1) Civil War embalming, featuring the story of Dr. Thomas Holmes

(Note: I will have more on Dr. Holmes in my forthcoming July 2011 "Medical Department" column in Civil War News...stay tuned!)

19th-century mourning wear
A vignette of a 19th century home wake/funeral
19th-century mourning items



Friday, June 3, 2011

"Six Feet Under" - Visit to National Museum of Funeral History - #2 - Lincoln Funeral Train

My first post about my visit to the National Museum of Funeral History is here.

In this post, I highlight one of the Museum's special perm
anent exhibits: Presidential Funerals...and my favorite part of the exhibit was the Abraham Lincoln-related displays!
















Indeed, the Museum has one of only three scale replicas of the Lincoln Funeral Train crafted by the incomparable Dr. Wayne Wesolowski. You can learn about his funeral train replica project a
t "Abraham Lincoln Online" here and by reading his booklet, The Lincoln Train is Coming, which describes Lincoln's funeral arrangements and the trip from Washington to Springfield.

Be
low are photos of:

The Lincoln Funeral Train Model

Lincoln Lying in State
The Presidential Funerals Wing
The Hearse Used for the Funerals of Presidents Ford and Reagan
T
omb of the Unknown Soldiers Display





























"Six Feet Under" - Visit to National Museum of Funeral History - #1 - Overview

It is now summer, and vacation season, and many families – including many Civil War enthusiasts – will be making trips to battlefields and museums. If you are in my area – near Houston, Texas – consider a visit to the National Museum of Funeral History (website here). I had the great pleasure of visiting this most interesting institution recently to do some research for a "Medical Department" column for the Civil War News (coming soon!) and had a terrific time!

The museum – which opened its doors in October 1992 – fulfilled the aspirations of founder Robert L. Waltrip, who had long dreamed of an institution that would educate the public and preserve the rich heritage of the funeral industry. The NMFH is a non-profit 501 (c)(3) organization, and all profits raised by donations, admissions, and gift shop sales go towards the operation of the Museum.

With over 35,000 square feet of exhibition space, the NMFH is the largest educational center on funeral heritage in the United States and perhaps the world. The museum boasts several permanent exhibits, including a recreated 1900s casket factory (filled with original casket factory artifacts including handmade sanders and the sawdust located on the floor!), a display related to the Meso-American holiday of Dias de los Muertos (“Day of the Dead”), an 1860 German "Glaswagen" Funeral Coach (among other hearses), a display of “fantasy coffins” (including an airliner, a Mercedes Benz, animals, and a canoe), an exhibit dedicated to Papal funerals (encompassing 5,000 square feet of space and featuring one-of-a-kind items), and other funeral heritage artifacts.

Of special interest was a “Civil War Embalming Exhibit” featuring Dr. Thomas Holmes!

As experts in their field, the staff of the NMFH has been a leading consultant to many motion picture and television production companies as well as well as national and international print media. They have supplied “props” from the early days of the undertaker to the modern funeral home to “Kill Bill: Vol 1,” “Gangs of New York,” “Six Feet Under,” documentaries produced by A&E and Discovery, and other productions.

I'll be posting some photo collections of various exhibits over the next few days...here are some to get you started!


Front of M
useum
Gift Shop
Replica of 1900s Casket Factory (See their online tour of the factory here)
Main Exhibit Floor
Hearse Collection
World War I Era Railway Casket Carriage
Closeup of Identification Tag on WWI Casket