ISBN-13: 9781621901587 / Angielski / Miękka / 2015 / 280 str.
The Civil War was a tragic conflict that destroyed many lives, but for those trying to save lives the tragedy was often compounded. Military doctors labored through the smoke of battle where impossible conditions and fear of infection often forced them to resort to amputation, and most operations were performed without painkillers. Thomas Fanning Wood recorded his wartime experiences as a Confederate Army surgeon, and his recollections of those events allow us to hear a distinct voice of the Civil War. As a young soldier recovering from fever at a Richmond hospital, Wood developed an interest in medicine that was encouraged by a doctor who steered him toward medical training. After only eight months of study he was made an assistant surgeon in the Third North Carolina Regiment. His narrativeudrawn from his memoirs, letters from the front, and articles written for his hometown newspaperupresents a poignant and sometimes horrifying picture of what the Civil War physician had to face both under battlefield conditions and in urban hospitals. Wood himself spent much of his time at the front, and his vivid narrative describes both a doctorAEs daily activities and the campaigns he witnessed. He was present at many of the warAEs major engagements: he was near Stonewall Jackson when the general fell at Chancellorsville, manned a field dressing station at the foot of CulpAEs Hill at Gettysburg, and was one of the few survivors of the Union attack on the ""mule shoe"" at Spotsylvania when his entire division was wiped out. WoodAEs account also lends new insight into Jubal EarlyAEs 1864 campaigns in the Shenandoah Valley and against Washington. With its observations of medical care and training not found in standard histories of the waruincluding a description of the examination required to become an assistant surgeonu Doctor to the Front offers a unique human perspective on the Civil War. With their additional descriptions of key figures and events, WoodAEs recollections combine historical significance and human interest to show us another side of that terrible conflict.