Civil War Camps and Soldier Health

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A01=Earl J. Hess
alcohol
American Civil War
Author_Earl J. Hess
camp life
Category=NHK
Category=NHW
disease
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
history of medicine
illness
military effectiveness
preventative healthcare
Sanitation Commission
soldier health
U.S. Sanitary Commission
Union army
USSC

Product details

  • ISBN 9781606355053
  • Dimensions: 155 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 26 May 2026
  • Publisher: Kent State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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An immersive analysis of camp life and soldiers’ well-being during the Civil War

The Civil War was a watershed in public awareness of the many health-related issues soldiers faced while living in camps. Sanitarians among civilians and regular army officers attempted to meet those challenges by addressing a range of topics associated with preventive healthcare in the volunteer army. The US Sanitary Commission, a nongovernmental agency sanctioned by the Federal government, created a massive campaign to study conditions in semipermanent camps and advise unit commanders how to avoid unnecessary illness and curb soldier deaths by disease. Commission inspectors, mostly civilian physicians, examined camps from 1861 to early 1864 and filed more than 1,400 reports of their findings.

Earl J. Hess delves deeply into 280 of those reports, shedding new and startling light on camp conditions. Addressing camp situation, shelter, clothing, personal cleanliness, garbage disposal, latrines, food, cooking, water, alcohol, morale, recruit examination, smallpox vaccination, regimental hospitals, and officer supervision, the camp inspection returns are unique snapshots of what it was like to live in a Union army camp. The reports reveal that sanitation varied widely from unit to unit and across time periods. Volunteer regimental officers and surgeons were often unable to take sanitary principles seriously, and disposing of garbage and human waste was often nonexistent. Overall, the volunteer regiments did well enough to get by, but they did not achieve high marks for military effectiveness when it came to preventive healthcare.

Civil War Camps and Soldier Health is a thought-provoking, impeccably researched volume that enriches our understanding of the sanitation challenges facing the Union army camps as well as how these challenges were recorded and examined by early researchers.

Earl J. Hess received his doctoral degree from Purdue University in 1986 and taught on the college level, primarily at Lincoln Memorial University, until 2020. He is the author of 30 books on Civil War military history, including Civil War Infantry Tactics: Training, Combat, and Small-Unit Effectiveness, Louisiana State University Press, 2015, winner of the Tom Watson Brown Book Award (Society of Civil War Historians) in 2016. Hess has explored a variety of themes and topics within Civil War history, including the use of field fortifications, the role of the rifle musket in Civil War combat, logistics and supply, generalship, the experience of combat for the common soldier, animals in the Civil War, innovative studies of field artillery and cavalry, plus several studies of campaigns and battles, especially in the Atlanta campaign. He is the co-author with his wife Pratibha A. Dabholkar of four books on the history of film musicals.

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