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In time for [[Battle of Antietam|Antietam]] (1862), [[the Army of the Potomac]], under its medical director [[Jonathan Letterman]], developed the Letterman Ambulance Plan. In this system the ambulances of a division moved together, under a mounted line sergeant, with two stretcher-bearers and one driver per ambulance, to collect the wounded from the field and then take them to the field hospital. This plan was implemented in August 1862 when McClellan issued [[General Orders No. 147]] creating the Ambulance Corps for the Army of the Potomac under the control of the Medical Director. {{short description|A unit of the Union Army during the American Civil War}}
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 Alexander Hammond|William Hammond]], the U.S. Surgeon-General. Until August 1862, the lack of trained ambulance drivers meant that the wounded had to wait a long time to receive medical care. This changed during the [[Battle of Antietam]] in September 1862 when his new system allowed the wounded men to be transferred quickly and prevent fewer deaths.<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":5" /> {{short description|Unit of the Union Army during the American Civil War}}

==History==
==History==
Early in the Civil War, no organized system of battlefield evacuation existed. Each [[Regiment (United States Army)|regiment]] was responsible for transporting the wounded back to a local [[field hospital]], creating a muddled system where wounded men could suffer on the battlefield for over a week. There was also no overall plan or doctrine for the evacuation of casualties to a [[general hospital]]. Ambulance drivers were generally either soldiers taken from other duties or civilian wagon drivers pulled from the streets of [[Washington, D.C.|Washington DC]]. Tasking soldiers to this role reduced the fighting strength of their unit, and often they would not return to their unit until after the fighting had subsided. Civilian drivers in particular were reportedly insubordinate, drunk or appropriated space inside the ambulances for non-medical use.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|last=Ginn|first=Richard|title=The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps|publisher=United States Army|year=1997|pages=11–13}}</ref>


With respect to the individual vehicles, the Army initially needed to round up commercial wagons to serve as ambulances. Consequently, many ambulances fled without retrieving any casualties during the [[First Battle of Bull Run]], leaving many wounded soldiers to fend for themselves. It subsequently took several days for the Union Army to organize a [[Train (military)|wagon train]] with staff to identify and remove the casualties.<ref name=":1"/><ref name="Ambulance">Schroeder-Lein, G. R. (2008). The Encyclopedia of Civil War Medicine. United States: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated. p. 14-15</ref>
Early in the [[American Civil War]], no organized system of battlefield evacuation existed. Regimental bands men were ordered to transport the wounded creating a muddled system where wounded men could suffer on the battlefield for over a week. There was no overall plan for evacuation and hospitalization of casualties. There was no unity, a lack of equipment, and facilities or integrated system of support. Ambulance drivers were generally either pressured soldiers or wagon and hack drivers pulled from the streets of [[Washington, D.C.|Washington DC]]. Surgeons reported drivers who were insubordinate, drunk or who appropriated space inside the ambulances intended for blankets and food. As to the vehicles themselves, the Army had been forced to round up commercial wagons and hacks to serve as ambulances.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Brooks |first1=Stewart |title=Civil War Medicine |date=1966 |publisher=Charles C. Thomas Publisher |pages=13, 43, 54 }}</ref>


Various proposals for the creation of a formal ambulance corps were made in the first years of the Civil War. [[Charles Stuart Tripler]], medical director of the [[Army of the Potomac]], requested that an ambulance corps be created in the fall of 1861 but his recommendation was not acted on, leaving the situation unchanged through the early part of 1862. In [[Missouri]], surgeon [[John H. Brinton]] reported that the lack of adequate evacuation capability had caused the abandonment of the wounded, with many subsequently captured. He was able to organize regimental ambulance trains each under the command of a [[non-commissioned officer]]. The [[United States Sanitary Commission]] lobbied heavily for the creation of an ambulance regiment and backed the appointment of [[William A. Hammond]] as [[Surgeon General of the United States Army|Surgeon General]]. Hammond was in favor of an ambulance corps, but this was opposed by [[General-in-chief#United States|General-in-chief]] [[Henry Halleck]], who worried it would lead to a larger train that would slow down the army.<ref name=":1"/><ref name="Ambulance"/>
In [[Missouri]], [[Surgeon John H. Brinton]] reported that the lack of adequate evacuation capability had caused abandonment of the wounded. Those who were able crawled to whatever cover they could reach; many were captured. <ref>{{Cite book|last=Brinton|first=John|title=Personal Memoirs of John H. Brinton, Major and Surgeon, U.S.V. 1861-1865|publisher=Neale|year=1914|location=New York|pages=18}}</ref>


[[File:Jonathan Letterman.jpg|thumb|238x238px|Jonathan Letterman]]
The absence of personnel dedicated to the evacuations required commanders to use combat soldiers to remove the wounded from the battlefield, further reducing the Army's fighting strength. A Confederate report echoed the universal complaint of line commanders: "If any from the ranks are drawn from the fight to carry off the wounded, they never return until the fight is over, and thus three are lost to the company instead of one wounded."<ref>{{Cite book|last=Clements|first=Bennett Augustine|title=Memoir of Jonathan Letterman|publisher=Palala Press|year=1883|pages=5–6}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Chisholm|first=Julian|title=A Manual of Military Surgery for the Use of Surgeons in the Confederate Army|year=1861|pages=92}}</ref>
When Letterman became medical director of the Army of the Potomac, he worked to create an integrated medical capability based on a coordinated system of casualty evacuation to divisional field hospitals and the organization of medical logistics, including medicine supply tables. On August 2, 1862, under the instruction of Jonathan Letterman, [[General George B. McClellan (Ellicott)|General George B. McClellan]] issued [[General Orders 147]] and created the United States Army’s first full-time, dedicated Ambulance Corps. These orders determined the structure, training and role of the service; and were a blueprint for the creation of subsequent Ambulance Corps later in the war.<ref name=":2">{{Cite book|last=Ginn|first=Richard|title=The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps|publisher=United States Army|year=1997|pages=11–13}}</ref><ref name="Ambulance"/>


His plan placed all ambulances for each [[Corps#American Civil War|army corps]] under the control of its medical director. Captains commanded the corps-level ambulance organization, first lieutenants commanded at the [[Divisions of the United States Army#American Civil War|division]] level, second lieutenants led at the [[Brigade (United States Army)|brigade]] level, and sergeants at the regimental level. Letterman's use of non-physician officers to command ambulance units represented a significant shift in Army Medical Department policy, as it allowed physicians to focus on patient care.<ref name=":1"/><ref name="Ambulance Corps">Schroeder-Lein, G. R. (2008). The Encyclopedia of Civil War Medicine. United States: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated. p. 11-12</ref><ref name="Duty">Shrader, C. R., Newell, C. R. (2011). Of Duty Well and Faithfully Done: A History of the Regular Army in the Civil War. United States: Nebraska. p. 179</ref>
[[Surgeon Thomas A. McParlin]], medical director of the Federal Army of [[Virginia]], wrote that Americans should follow the lead of the Europeans. "A well-organized regularly established ambulance corps would have been a blessing."<ref>{{Cite book|title=Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 1 Volume 1|publisher=War Department|year=1870|pages=117}}</ref>


[[File:Civil War Ambulance at Fort Scott NHS.jpg|thumb|Recreation of a Civil War Ambulance at [[Fort Scott National Historic Site|Fort Scott]]]]
The horror of the unnecessary suffering of injured soldiers compelled officers to improve frontline medical provisions.


Each infantry [[Regiment (United States Army)|regiment]] was assigned a pair of two-horse ambulances, a four-horse ambulance, and a medical supply wagon. Cavalry regiments were assigned two ambulances while each [[artillery battery]] was assigned one. Each ambulance could carry two stretchers and was assigned three [[Private (rank)#United States Army|privates]], one a driver and the other two [[stretcher bearer]]s trained specifically in their duty. Each supply wagon was assigned a private as a driver. Two additional supply wagons were assigned to each division, and each army corps was assigned an additional two ambulances. Only patients and medical personnel were allowed to utilize these wagons, preventing them from being commandeered for other purposes.<ref name=":1"/><ref name="Ambulance Corps"/><ref name="Duty"/>
A variety of ideas for an ambulance system surfaced in [[the Union Army]]. One was for an ambulance company of two lieutenants and sixty-seven soldiers for each corps, with the entire ambulance organization under command of a medical officer. A variation of that idea was an ambulance company for each division. The Sanitary Commission proposed an ambulance regiment for [[the Army of the Potomac]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 1 Volume 1|year=1870|pages=117}}</ref> [[Jonathan Letterman]], medical director of [[the Army of the Potomac]], established an integrated medical capability based on three principal elements: a coordinated system of casualty evacuation from the point of wounding back through the division rear; organization of medical logistics, including supply tables and transportation; and establishment of division field hospitals as part of the evacuation chain <ref name=":0" />
[[File:Jonathan Letterman.jpg|thumb|238x238px|Jonathan Letterman]]


[[File:Ambulance Corps. Method of removing wounded from the field.jpg|thumb|U.S. Ambulance Corps field training. Photograph by [[William F. Browne]]]]


The Army of the Potomac's Ambulance Corps soon demonstrated its worth in the Battle of Antietam in September 1862, although it was only partially in place. Where the corps was set up on the Union right wing, all wounded soldiers were evacuated during the night, while on the left wing, the wounded were not evacuated until the following night. Nevertheless, despite its success, the service received hostility from the military.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Letterman|first=Jonathan|title=Medical Recollections of the Army of the Potomac|year=1866|pages=42–43, 80}}</ref><ref name=":4">{{Cite book|last=Sears|first=Stephen W.|title=Landscape Turned Red|publisher=Ticknor and Fields|year=1983|location=New York|pages=295–96}}</ref><ref name=":5">{{Cite book|last=Livermore|first=Thomas L.|title=Number and losses in the civil war in America 1861-65|publisher=Mifflin and Co|year=1901|pages=92–93}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 3 Volume 2|year=1883|pages=937}}</ref>


Full implementation of Letterman's plan occurred three months later at [[Battle of Fredericksburg|Fredericksburg]]. With nearly 1,000 ambulances available, all Union casualties (with the exception of about twenty soldiers who were within Confederate lines) were evacuated during the night of 13 December. Surgeon General Hammond, visiting the Army of the Potomac, expressed his approval of the results.<ref name=":2"/><ref name="Ambulance Corps"/> General McClellan also gave his approval of the service, noting how it decreased the number of combat soldiers pulled from the battlefield. The Army of the Potomac continued to benefit from its unified medical support capability in the [[Battle of Gettysburg]], where not one wounded soldier was left on the battlefield within Union lines by early morning the day after the battle. By the summer of 1864 the Army of the Potomac's ambulance corps numbered 800 ambulances with 66 officers and 2,600 enlisted soldiers.<ref name=":2"/><ref name="Ambulance Corps"/>
On August 2, 1862, under the instruction of [[Jonathan Letterman]], the Medical Director of [[the Army of the Potomac]], [[General George B. McClellan (Ellicott)|General George B. McClellan]] issued [[General Orders 147]] and created the United States Army’s first full-time, dedicated Ambulance Corps. These orders determined the structure, training and role of the service; and were a blueprint for the creation of subsequent Ambulance Corps later in the war. His plan placed all ambulances under the control of the medical director. Captains commanded the corps-level ambulance organization, first lieutenants commanded at the division level, second lieutenants led at the brigade level, and sergeants at the regimental level <ref name=":0" />.[[File:Civil War Ambulance at Fort Scott NHS.jpg|thumb|Civil War Ambulance at Fort Scott]]


Surgeon General Hammon recommended that other Union Army units also adopt Letterman's innovations, although many continued to experience difficulty in battlefield evacuation. Surgeon [[Thomas A. McParlin]], medical director of the Federal [[Army of Virginia]], submitted Letterman's plan to his commander, [[Brigadier General]] [[John Pope (military officer)|John Pope]], but there was not enough time to implement it before [[Second Manassas]]. Surgeon [[Glover Perin]], upon becoming medical director of the [[Army of the Cumberland]] in February 1863, found an inefficient ambulance service. He attributed this to the absence of commissioned ambulance corps officers, the lack of attendants, and the control of ambulances by the Quartermaster Department. He adopted a modified Letterman plan, but even with that in place the Army of the Cumberland left behind an estimated 2,500 of its wounded at [[Battle of Chickamauga|Chickamauga]] in September 1863.<ref name=":2" />
Letterman's use of non-physician officers to command ambulance units represented a significant shift in Army Medical Department policy. His intent was to relieve the physicians from duties that distracted them from their primary mission of patient care. Another important feature of Letterman's plan was the assignment of vehicles to the direct control of the medical director. Two-patient ambulances, each with two privates and a driver, were allocated on the basis of three for each infantry regiment, two for each cavalry regiment, and one for each artillery battery. Two supply wagons were assigned to each division's ambulance corps. Only medical personnel were permitted to accompany the sick and wounded to the rear, and only patients were allowed to ride in the ambulances. This instigated a major improvement in battlefield medicine. <ref name=":1">{{Cite book|last=Ginn|first=Richard|title=The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps|publisher=United States Army|year=1997|pages=15}}</ref> [[File:Ambulance Corps. Method of removing wounded from the field.jpg|thumb|U.S. Ambulance Corps field training. Photograph by [[William F. Browne]]]]


The success of Letterman's corps, combined with petitions and lobbying by Hammond and others, put pressure on Congress to create a permanent ambulance corps. They did so on 11 March 1864, passing a law that authorized corps commanders to form ambulance organizations and provided for the examination of candidates to staff it by boards of medical officers. This was officially implemented by the [[War Department]]'s General Orders No. 106, issued on 16 March 1864, which also gave commanders the authority to create a distinctive uniform for members of the Ambulance Corps.<ref name=":3">{{Cite book|last=Ginn|first=Richard|title=The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps.|publisher=United States Army|year=1997|pages=16–18}}</ref>
In [[the Army of the Potomac]], the Ambulance Corps soon demonstrated its worth as they fought in Virginia and then moved north into Maryland. It was only partially in place for [[Battle of Antietam|the Battle of Antietam]] in September 1862, where, during twelve hours of combat, casualties from both sides rose to over 22,700. McClellan's casualties mounted to 25 percent of the soldiers who went into action. On the Union right wing, where Letterman's plan was in place, casualties were rapidly evacuated and all wounded within the Union lines were removed during the night. Casualties on the left, where the new evacuation plan was not in place, were not removed until the following night. Nevertheless, despite its success, the service received hostility from the military. <ref>{{Cite book|last=Letterman|first=Jonathan|title=Medical Recollections of the Army of the Potomac|year=1866|pages=42–43, 80}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Sears|first=Stephen W.|title=Landscape Turned Red|publisher=Ticknor and Fields|year=1983|location=New York|pages=295–96}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Livermore|first=Thomas L.|title=Number and losses in the civil war in America 1861-65|publisher=Mifflin and Co|year=1901|pages=92–93}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 3 Volume 2|year=1883|pages=937}}</ref>


Following the Civil War the Army Medical Department, like the rest of the Army, declined in numbers. The special laws that had been passed for the prosecution of the Civil War expired when the war ended including, in 1866, the law that created the Ambulance Corps. Along with the wartime structure of the Ambulance Corps, the general hospitals, [[hospital ship]]s and [[hospital train|trains]] disappeared. The Medical Department forfeited the progress it had made toward establishing commissioned officers in medical administrative specialties.<ref name=":3" />
Full implementation of Letterman's plan occurred three months later, at [[Battle of Fredericksburg|Fredericksburg]]. There, Letterman reported that the ambulance corps had begun to evacuate the wounded after dark on 13 December and by daylight had removed all the casualties except some twenty soldiers who were within the Confederate lines. Surgeon General Hammond, visiting the Army of the Potomac, was pleased with the results. <ref>{{Cite book|title=Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 1 Volume 1|year=1870|pages=131}}</ref><ref name=":1" /> General McClellan wrote that Letterman's ambulance corps decreased the number of combat soldiers pulled from the battlefield, "one of the great requirements for our armies." <ref name=":1" />The Army of the Potomac continued to benefit from its unified medical support capability in battles after Antietam. <ref>{{Cite book|title=Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 1 Volume 1|year=1870|pages=141-42, 148, 205}}</ref> There were 14,193 wounded Union soldiers at [[Battle of Gettysburg|Gettysburg]], 1-3 July 1863, yet there were no wounded left on the battlefield within Union lines by early morning the day after the battle. Letterman reported: "I know of no battlefield from which wounded men have been so speedily and so carefully removed." By the summer of 1864 the Army of the Potomac's ambulance corps numbered 800 ambulances with 66 officers and 2,600 enlisted soldiers <ref name=":2">{{Cite book|last=Ginn|first=Richard|title=The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps|publisher=United States Army|year=1997|pages=16}}</ref>.


==Ambulances==
Union Army units that failed to adopt Letterman's innovations continued to experience difficulty in battlefield evacuation. [[Surgeon Glover Perin]], upon becoming medical director of the Army of the [[Cumberland, Maryland|Cumberland]] in February 1863, found an inefficient ambulance service. He attributed this to the absence of commissioned ambulance corps officers, the lack of attendants, and the control of ambulances by the Quartermaster Department. He adopted a modified Letterman plan, but even with that in place the Army of the Cumberland left behind an estimated twenty-five hundred of its wounded at [[Battle of Chickamauga|Chickamauga]] in September 1863. <ref name=":2" />
In the first year of the Civil War, the US Army had relatively few dedicated ambulances and often used standard wagons repurposed as ambulances. Of the ambulance wagons it did have, most were the two-wheeled variety pulled by one or two horses. These could carry two or three patients at most, broke down often, and were referred to as "avalanches" or "gutbusters" due to the poor quality of riding in them.<ref name="Ambulance"/>


By the second year of the war, four-wheeled ambulances had largely replaced the two-wheeled vehicles. There were many variations, but they generally included [[Car suspension|spring suspension]] and came in two types: a light two-horse wagon and a heavier four-horse wagon. The largest types could carry four to six on stretchers and several more seated. Although an improvement over previous vehicles, they were still not comfortable to ride in, with the ultimate goal of getting the patient to another form of transport or hospital by the shortest distance possible.<ref name="Ambulance"/>
[[Surgeon Thomas A. McParlin]], then medical director of the Army of Virginia, received a copy of Letterman's plan and submitted it to his commander, [[Brig. Gen. John Pope]], but there was not enough time to implement it before Second Manassas. McParlin believed that Pope's army would greatly benefit from an ambulance corps. "The lessons of experience should not be disregarded, especially in matters of such transcendant importance. At such a time, a well organized, regularly established ambulance corps would have been a blessing." <ref name=":2" />


The purpose of a medicine wagon was to carry three month's worth of medical and surgical supplies for a regiment. These were carried in special drawers and shelving to keep them organized and prevent shifting during transit. A variety of designs were prototyped and adopted during the war, but the Autenrieth model seems to have become the standard, with the Perot also fairly common. Both were fairly boxy, conventional designs. Early models of the Autenrieth tended to be top-heavy and lacked breaking mechanisms, but these were eventually rectified.<ref>Schroeder-Lein, G. R. (2008). The Encyclopedia of Civil War Medicine. United States: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated. p. 32-33</ref>
On 11 March 1864, Hammond's efforts and the success of Letterman's plan, backed by petitions and lobbying efforts, resulted in congressional action that established a permanent ambulance corps. The law authorized corps commanders to detail officers and enlisted soldiers to form their ambulance organizations and provided for the examination of candidates by boards of medical officers. As one citizens' committee put it, the Army should carefully screen the officer candidates because of the special trust it placed in them, and they should "at least equal the best of the fighting-men in gallantry."The War Department implemented the law in General Orders No. 106, 16 March 1864, a directive that also gave commanders the authority to create a distinctive uniform for members of the Ambulance Corps.<ref name=":3">{{Cite book|last=Ginn|first=Richard|title=The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps.|publisher=United States Army|year=1997|pages=17–18}}</ref>


<gallery>
Following the civil war the medical Department, like the rest of the Army, declined in numbers. The special laws that had been passed for the prosecution of the Civil War expired when the war ended, and along with them the wartime structure of the Ambulance Corps, the general hospitals, and the hospital transports and trains disappeared. The Medical Department forfeited the progress it had made toward establishing commissioned officers in medical administrative specialties. The law that created the Ambulance Corps expired in 1866. <ref name=":3" />
File:MSHWR - USA wagon fitted ambulance pag 956.png|US Army wagon fitted as an ambulance
File:MSHWR - Finley wagon pag 946.png|The "Finley" ambulance wagon
File:MSHWR - Moses ambulance and tent.png|The "Moses" ambulance wagon
File:MSHWR - Tripler ambulance wagon pag 947.png|The "Tripler" ambulance wagon
File:MSHWR - Perot's medicine wagon pag 917.png|Perot medicine wagon
File:MSHWR - Autenrieth medicine wagon pag 918.png|Autenrieth medicine wagon
</gallery>


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
Brooks, Stewart (1966). Civil War Medicine. Charles C. Thomas Publisher.
*Brooks, Stewart (1966). Civil War Medicine. Charles C. Thomas Publisher.
*Brinton, John (1914). Personal Memoirs of John H. Brinton, Major and Surgeon, U.S.V. 1861-1865. New York: Neale.

*Clements, Bennett Augustine (1883). Memoir of Jonathan Letterman. Palala Press.
Brinton, John (1914). Personal Memoirs of John H. Brinton, Major and Surgeon, U.S.V. 1861-1865. New York: Neale.
*Chisholm, Julian (1861). A Manual of Military Surgery for the Use of Surgeons in the Confederate Army.

*Ginn, Richard (1997). The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps. United States Army.
Clements, Bennett Augustine (1883). Memoir of Jonathan Letterman. Palala Press.
*Letterman, Jonathan (1866). Medical Recollections of the Army of the Potomac.

*Livermore, Thomas L. (1901). Number and losses in the civil war in America 1861-65. Mifflin and Co.
Chisholm, Julian (1861). A Manual of Military Surgery for the Use of Surgeons in the Confederate Army.
*Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 1 Volume 1. 1870.

Ginn, Richard (1997). The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps. United States Army.
*Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 3 Volume 2. 1883.
*Sears, Stephen W. (1983). Landscape Turned Red. New York: Ticknor and Fields.

*Schroeder-Lein, G. R. (2008). The Encyclopedia of Civil War Medicine. United States: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated.
Letterman, Jonathan (1866). Medical Recollections of the Army of the Potomac.
*Shrader, C. R., Newell, C. R. (2011). Of Duty Well and Faithfully Done: A History of the Regular Army in the Civil War. United States: Nebraska.

Livermore, Thomas L. (1901). Number and losses in the civil war in America 1861-65. Mifflin and Co.

Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 1 Volume 1. 1870.

Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 3 Volume 2. 1883.

Sears, Stephen W. (1983). Landscape Turned Red. New York: Ticknor and Fields.


==See also==
==See also==
Line 63: Line 68:
*Wagner, Margaret. ''The American Civil War: 365 Days''. Abrams, New York, in association with the Library of Congress.
*Wagner, Margaret. ''The American Civil War: 365 Days''. Abrams, New York, in association with the Library of Congress.
*{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/S0002-9610(05)80905-5 |title=Samuel Preston Moore: Surgeon-general of the confederacy |year=1992 |last1=Purcell |first1=Peter N. |last2=Hummel |first2=Robert P. |journal=The American Journal of Surgery |volume=164 |issue=4 |pmid=1415944 |pages=361–5}}
*{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/S0002-9610(05)80905-5 |title=Samuel Preston Moore: Surgeon-general of the confederacy |year=1992 |last1=Purcell |first1=Peter N. |last2=Hummel |first2=Robert P. |journal=The American Journal of Surgery |volume=164 |issue=4 |pmid=1415944 |pages=361–5}}

{{Portal bar|American Civil War|Medicine|Transport}}


[[Category:Union Army corps|Ambulance]]
[[Category:Union Army corps|Ambulance]]
[[Category:Military units and formations of the Union Army]]
[[Category:Military units and formations of the Union Army]]
[[Category:United States Sanitary Commission]]
[[Category:American Civil War medicine]]
[[Category:American Civil War medicine]]
[[Category:1862 establishments in the United States]]
[[Category:1862 establishments in the United States]]



{{AmericanCivilWar-stub}}
{{AmericanCivilWar-stub}}

Latest revision as of 09:54, 22 March 2024

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. Until August 1862, the lack of trained ambulance drivers meant that the wounded had to wait a long time to receive medical care. This changed during the Battle of Antietam in September 1862 when his new system allowed the wounded men to be transferred quickly and prevent fewer deaths.[1][2]

History[edit]

Early in the Civil War, no organized system of battlefield evacuation existed. Each regiment was responsible for transporting the wounded back to a local field hospital, creating a muddled system where wounded men could suffer on the battlefield for over a week. There was also no overall plan or doctrine for the evacuation of casualties to a general hospital. Ambulance drivers were generally either soldiers taken from other duties or civilian wagon drivers pulled from the streets of Washington DC. Tasking soldiers to this role reduced the fighting strength of their unit, and often they would not return to their unit until after the fighting had subsided. Civilian drivers in particular were reportedly insubordinate, drunk or appropriated space inside the ambulances for non-medical use.[3]

With respect to the individual vehicles, the Army initially needed to round up commercial wagons to serve as ambulances. Consequently, many ambulances fled without retrieving any casualties during the First Battle of Bull Run, leaving many wounded soldiers to fend for themselves. It subsequently took several days for the Union Army to organize a wagon train with staff to identify and remove the casualties.[3][4]

Various proposals for the creation of a formal ambulance corps were made in the first years of the Civil War. Charles Stuart Tripler, medical director of the Army of the Potomac, requested that an ambulance corps be created in the fall of 1861 but his recommendation was not acted on, leaving the situation unchanged through the early part of 1862. In Missouri, surgeon John H. Brinton reported that the lack of adequate evacuation capability had caused the abandonment of the wounded, with many subsequently captured. He was able to organize regimental ambulance trains each under the command of a non-commissioned officer. The United States Sanitary Commission lobbied heavily for the creation of an ambulance regiment and backed the appointment of William A. Hammond as Surgeon General. Hammond was in favor of an ambulance corps, but this was opposed by General-in-chief Henry Halleck, who worried it would lead to a larger train that would slow down the army.[3][4]

Jonathan Letterman

When Letterman became medical director of the Army of the Potomac, he worked to create an integrated medical capability based on a coordinated system of casualty evacuation to divisional field hospitals and the organization of medical logistics, including medicine supply tables. On August 2, 1862, under the instruction of Jonathan Letterman, General George B. McClellan issued General Orders 147 and created the United States Army’s first full-time, dedicated Ambulance Corps. These orders determined the structure, training and role of the service; and were a blueprint for the creation of subsequent Ambulance Corps later in the war.[5][4]

His plan placed all ambulances for each army corps under the control of its medical director. Captains commanded the corps-level ambulance organization, first lieutenants commanded at the division level, second lieutenants led at the brigade level, and sergeants at the regimental level. Letterman's use of non-physician officers to command ambulance units represented a significant shift in Army Medical Department policy, as it allowed physicians to focus on patient care.[3][6][7]

Recreation of a Civil War Ambulance at Fort Scott

Each infantry regiment was assigned a pair of two-horse ambulances, a four-horse ambulance, and a medical supply wagon. Cavalry regiments were assigned two ambulances while each artillery battery was assigned one. Each ambulance could carry two stretchers and was assigned three privates, one a driver and the other two stretcher bearers trained specifically in their duty. Each supply wagon was assigned a private as a driver. Two additional supply wagons were assigned to each division, and each army corps was assigned an additional two ambulances. Only patients and medical personnel were allowed to utilize these wagons, preventing them from being commandeered for other purposes.[3][6][7]

U.S. Ambulance Corps field training. Photograph by William F. Browne

The Army of the Potomac's Ambulance Corps soon demonstrated its worth in the Battle of Antietam in September 1862, although it was only partially in place. Where the corps was set up on the Union right wing, all wounded soldiers were evacuated during the night, while on the left wing, the wounded were not evacuated until the following night. Nevertheless, despite its success, the service received hostility from the military.[8][1][2][9]

Full implementation of Letterman's plan occurred three months later at Fredericksburg. With nearly 1,000 ambulances available, all Union casualties (with the exception of about twenty soldiers who were within Confederate lines) were evacuated during the night of 13 December. Surgeon General Hammond, visiting the Army of the Potomac, expressed his approval of the results.[5][6] General McClellan also gave his approval of the service, noting how it decreased the number of combat soldiers pulled from the battlefield. The Army of the Potomac continued to benefit from its unified medical support capability in the Battle of Gettysburg, where not one wounded soldier was left on the battlefield within Union lines by early morning the day after the battle. By the summer of 1864 the Army of the Potomac's ambulance corps numbered 800 ambulances with 66 officers and 2,600 enlisted soldiers.[5][6]

Surgeon General Hammon recommended that other Union Army units also adopt Letterman's innovations, although many continued to experience difficulty in battlefield evacuation. Surgeon Thomas A. McParlin, medical director of the Federal Army of Virginia, submitted Letterman's plan to his commander, Brigadier General John Pope, but there was not enough time to implement it before Second Manassas. Surgeon Glover Perin, upon becoming medical director of the Army of the Cumberland in February 1863, found an inefficient ambulance service. He attributed this to the absence of commissioned ambulance corps officers, the lack of attendants, and the control of ambulances by the Quartermaster Department. He adopted a modified Letterman plan, but even with that in place the Army of the Cumberland left behind an estimated 2,500 of its wounded at Chickamauga in September 1863.[5]

The success of Letterman's corps, combined with petitions and lobbying by Hammond and others, put pressure on Congress to create a permanent ambulance corps. They did so on 11 March 1864, passing a law that authorized corps commanders to form ambulance organizations and provided for the examination of candidates to staff it by boards of medical officers. This was officially implemented by the War Department's General Orders No. 106, issued on 16 March 1864, which also gave commanders the authority to create a distinctive uniform for members of the Ambulance Corps.[10]

Following the Civil War the Army Medical Department, like the rest of the Army, declined in numbers. The special laws that had been passed for the prosecution of the Civil War expired when the war ended including, in 1866, the law that created the Ambulance Corps. Along with the wartime structure of the Ambulance Corps, the general hospitals, hospital ships and trains disappeared. The Medical Department forfeited the progress it had made toward establishing commissioned officers in medical administrative specialties.[10]

Ambulances[edit]

In the first year of the Civil War, the US Army had relatively few dedicated ambulances and often used standard wagons repurposed as ambulances. Of the ambulance wagons it did have, most were the two-wheeled variety pulled by one or two horses. These could carry two or three patients at most, broke down often, and were referred to as "avalanches" or "gutbusters" due to the poor quality of riding in them.[4]

By the second year of the war, four-wheeled ambulances had largely replaced the two-wheeled vehicles. There were many variations, but they generally included spring suspension and came in two types: a light two-horse wagon and a heavier four-horse wagon. The largest types could carry four to six on stretchers and several more seated. Although an improvement over previous vehicles, they were still not comfortable to ride in, with the ultimate goal of getting the patient to another form of transport or hospital by the shortest distance possible.[4]

The purpose of a medicine wagon was to carry three month's worth of medical and surgical supplies for a regiment. These were carried in special drawers and shelving to keep them organized and prevent shifting during transit. A variety of designs were prototyped and adopted during the war, but the Autenrieth model seems to have become the standard, with the Perot also fairly common. Both were fairly boxy, conventional designs. Early models of the Autenrieth tended to be top-heavy and lacked breaking mechanisms, but these were eventually rectified.[11]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Brooks, Stewart (1966). Civil War Medicine. Charles C. Thomas Publisher.
  • Brinton, John (1914). Personal Memoirs of John H. Brinton, Major and Surgeon, U.S.V. 1861-1865. New York: Neale.
  • Clements, Bennett Augustine (1883). Memoir of Jonathan Letterman. Palala Press.
  • Chisholm, Julian (1861). A Manual of Military Surgery for the Use of Surgeons in the Confederate Army.
  • Ginn, Richard (1997). The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps. United States Army.
  • Letterman, Jonathan (1866). Medical Recollections of the Army of the Potomac.
  • Livermore, Thomas L. (1901). Number and losses in the civil war in America 1861-65. Mifflin and Co.
  • Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 1 Volume 1. 1870.
  • Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 3 Volume 2. 1883.
  • Sears, Stephen W. (1983). Landscape Turned Red. New York: Ticknor and Fields.
  • Schroeder-Lein, G. R. (2008). The Encyclopedia of Civil War Medicine. United States: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated.
  • Shrader, C. R., Newell, C. R. (2011). Of Duty Well and Faithfully Done: A History of the Regular Army in the Civil War. United States: Nebraska.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Sears, Stephen W. (1983). Landscape Turned Red. New York: Ticknor and Fields. pp. 295–96.
  2. ^ a b Livermore, Thomas L. (1901). Number and losses in the civil war in America 1861-65. Mifflin and Co. pp. 92–93.
  3. ^ a b c d e Ginn, Richard (1997). The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps. United States Army. pp. 11–13.
  4. ^ a b c d e Schroeder-Lein, G. R. (2008). The Encyclopedia of Civil War Medicine. United States: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated. p. 14-15
  5. ^ a b c d Ginn, Richard (1997). The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps. United States Army. pp. 11–13.
  6. ^ a b c d Schroeder-Lein, G. R. (2008). The Encyclopedia of Civil War Medicine. United States: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated. p. 11-12
  7. ^ a b Shrader, C. R., Newell, C. R. (2011). Of Duty Well and Faithfully Done: A History of the Regular Army in the Civil War. United States: Nebraska. p. 179
  8. ^ Letterman, Jonathan (1866). Medical Recollections of the Army of the Potomac. pp. 42–43, 80.
  9. ^ Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion Part 3 Volume 2. 1883. p. 937.
  10. ^ a b Ginn, Richard (1997). The History of the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps. United States Army. pp. 16–18.
  11. ^ Schroeder-Lein, G. R. (2008). The Encyclopedia of Civil War Medicine. United States: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated. p. 32-33

Sources[edit]

  • Wagner, Margaret. The American Civil War: 365 Days. Abrams, New York, in association with the Library of Congress.
  • Purcell, Peter N.; Hummel, Robert P. (1992). "Samuel Preston Moore: Surgeon-general of the confederacy". The American Journal of Surgery. 164 (4): 361–5. doi:10.1016/S0002-9610(05)80905-5. PMID 1415944.