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        <title><emph>THE GENERAL MILITARY HOSPITAL 
FOR THE NORTH CAROLINA TROOPS IN PETERSBURG VIRGINIA:</emph>
Electronic Edition.</title>
        <author/>
        <funder>Funding from the Institute of Museum and Library
 Services supported the electronic publication of this title.</funder>
        <respStmt>
          <resp>Text scanned (OCR) by</resp>
          <name id="cg">Jim Crawford</name>
        </respStmt>
        <respStmt>
          <resp>Images scanned by</resp>
          <name>Joshua McKim</name>
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          <name id="ns">Joshua McKim  
and Natalia Smith</name>
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        <edition>First edition, 
<date>1999</date></edition>
      </editionStmt>
      <extent>ca.     60K</extent>
      <publicationStmt>
        <publisher>Academic Affairs Library, UNC-CH</publisher>
        <pubPlace>University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, </pubPlace>
        <date>1999.</date>
        <availability status="unknown">
          <p>© This work is the property of the University of North Carolina 
at Chapel Hill. It may be used freely by individuals for research, 
teaching and personal use as long as this statement of availability is 
included in the text.</p>
        </availability>
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      <notesStmt>
        <note anchored="yes">VCp970.77 P48g 1861 (North Carolina Collection, UNC-CH)</note>
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          <title>The General Military Hospital for the North Carolina Troops in 
Petersburg Virginia</title>
          <author/>
          <imprint>
            <pubPlace>Raleigh:</pubPlace>
            <publisher>Strother &amp; Marcom Book and 
Job Printers</publisher>
            <date>1861</date>
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digitization project, <hi rend="italics">Documenting the 
American South, Beginnings to 1920.</hi></p>
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            <item>General Military Hospital for the North Carolina Troops
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            <item>Military hospitals -- Virginia -- Petersburg -- History -- 19th
century.</item>
            <item>Military hospitals -- Confederate States of America --
History.</item>
            <item>Petersburg (Va.) -- History -- 19th century.</item>
            <item>Virginia -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Hospitals.</item>
            <item>North Carolina -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 --
Hospitals.</item>
            <item>United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 --
Hospitals.</item>
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        <date>1999-04-19, </date>
        <respStmt>
          <name>Celine Noel and Wanda Gunther </name>
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        <item> revised TEIHeader and created catalog 
record for the electronic edition.</item>
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      <change>
        <date>1999-03-18, </date>
        <respStmt>
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          <resp>project manager, </resp>
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        <item>finished TEI-conformant encoding and final proofing.</item>
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        <date>1999-03-15, </date>
        <respStmt>
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  <text>
    <front>
      <div1 type="cover image">
        <p>
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            <p>[Cover Image]</p>
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            <p>[Title Page Image]</p>
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      <titlePage type="titlepage">
        <docTitle>
          <titlePart type="main">THE<lb/>
GENERAL MILITARY HOSPITAL<lb/>
FOR THE<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA TROOPS<lb/>
IN<lb/>
PETERSBURG VIRGINIA.</titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <lb/>
        <docImprint><pubPlace>RALEIGH:</pubPlace>
<publisher>STROTHER&amp; MARCOM BOOK AND JOB PRINTERS.</publisher>
<lb/>
<docDate>1861.</docDate></docImprint>
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    <body>
      <div1 type="main text">
        <pb id="hosp3" n="3"/>
        <head>GENERAL MILITARY HOSPITAL.</head>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <p>THE General Military Hospital for the North Carolina
Troops, in Petersburg, Virginia, is situated on Perry street,
within a few yards of the Southern Rail Road, and is one of the
most convenient and comfortable Military Hospitals in the
country. The building is three stories in height, each story or
floor being divided into wards. It is provided with suitable
heating apparatus, and the windows are arranged for lowering
or hoisting. Each ward is lighted by gas; hot and cold water
carried over the Hospital, into the kitchen, the bathing rooms
and other places, on each floor, and into the laundry in the yard.
Suitable arrangements have also been made for conveying
patients from one floor to another without being carried up and
down the stairs by hand.</p>
          <p>The Hospital can be easily reached by means of an
Ambulance Car, which will be run across the city of Richmond
connecting the Central and Fredericksburg Railroads, which
transport the sick and wounded from the armies on the Potomac
and in Western Virginia, with the Richmond and Petersburg
Roads, running within thirty-five yards of the Hospital door;
while those from the Peninsular and from the south side of James
River, can readily get to Petersburg along the different 
<sic corr="routes">routs</sic>of travel from those places.</p>
          <p>The affairs of this Hospital will be under the general
management and supervision of the Governor of
<pb id="hosp4" n="4"/>
North Carolina, and the Surgeon General of the State, as an
<sic corr="Executive">Executivee</sic><sic corr="Committee"> Committe</sic>, 
who shall have power to select and
discharge all the officers and attendants required for the
Hospital and Hospital Depots; to receive and apply any
contributions of money or other things intended for the use of
the North Carolina volunteers or Hospital; and to do
everything necessary to carry out the objects contemplated by
establishing this Hospital.</p>
          <p>FIRST.—They shall apply to the Secretary of War and
Surgeon General of the Confederate States for the appointment
of such Surgeons and assistant Surgeons and Dressers as they
may select.</p>
          <p>SECOND.—They shall apply for the necessary medical
supplies for this Hospital.</p>
          <p>THIRD.—They shall apply for rations for the soldiers in
Hospital, and such of the employees of the Hospital as are
allowed rations under the rules and regulations of the
Confederate States Army.</p>
          <p>FOURTH.—They shall obtain transportation for Hospital
Stores, forwarded for the use of the Hospital, or any of the
North Carolina Volunteers in Virginia, and also for all persons
employed in carrying out properly the objects of this
institution.</p>
          <p>And in turn it shall be their duty to furnish to the War
Department any report or information relative to
the patients and expenditures that may be asked for; and to
publish from time to time such statements of the transactions of
the Hospital as they may deem advisable, or shall be called for
by authority, either for the information of the State, the Medical
and War Departments of the Confederate States, Contributors,
or for the benefit of the Volunteers.</p>
          <p>It shall also be their duty to extend the benefits of
<pb id="hosp5" n="5"/>
this Hospital to the Volunteers of any other State when they
can do so without excluding those from North Carolina.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>NUMBER OF OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES.</head>
          <p>One Surgeon-in-Chief, (commissioned;) two or three
Assistant Surgeons, (commissioned;) one Apothecary; one Secretary and
Clerk; one Steward and Treasurer; one Matron and two or
three assistants; three or four Medical Students as dressers, &amp;c.; 
Nurses, Servants, Cooks, and Washers, as many as may be 
required.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>DUTIES OF THE HOSPITAL OFFICERS.</head>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>SURGEON-IN-CHIEF.</head>
            <p>1. It shall be the duty of the chief Surgeon to superintend and
direct the medical and surgical treatment of the patients, and to
keep the Executive Committee informed of all requisitions
necessary for these purposes. He will distribute the patients,
according to convenience and the nature of their complaints,
into wards or divisions, under the particular charge of the
assistant Surgeons, and will visit them himself each day, as
frequently as the sick or wounded may require, accompanied by
the Assistant Surgeons, Dressers and Nurses.</p>
            <p>2. His prescriptions of medicine and diet are daily to be
written down in a register, with the name of the patient and
number of the bed; and the Assistant Surgeons or Dressers, in
his absence, will see that the directions are carried out.</p>
            <p>3. He will enforce the proper Hospital regulations
to promote health and prevent contagion, by having
well ventilated and not over crowded rooms, scrupulous 
cleanliness, changes of bed linen, &amp;c.</p>
            <p>4. All the employees of the Hospital will be under
<pb id="hosp6" n="6"/>
his orders; and he will carefully see to the keeping of the
following records: a register of patients; a prescription and diet
book; a case book; copies of his requisitions; monthly returns
of sick and wounded; an order and letter book,  in which will be
transcribed all orders and letters relating to his duties.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>ASSISTANT SURGEONS.</head>
            <p>The Assistant Surgeons shall be under the control and
direction of the Chief Surgeon, and in like manner subject to
removal. They shall see that subordinate officers do their duty,
and aid in enforcing the regulations of the Hospital.</p>
            <p>They must not leave the Hospital without the consent of the
chief Surgeon, and one or the other of them must always be
there when the chief Surgeon is absent.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>APOTHECARY.</head>
            <p>The Apothecary must be a competent man, approved by the
Chief Surgeon, and appointed by the Executive Committee.</p>
            <p>His duty is to dispense the medicines and put up the
prescriptions of the surgeons.</p>
            <p>He must remain in the Hospital building day and
night, so as to be always at hand to discharge the
proper duties of his office.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>RESIDENT STUDENTS OR DRESSERS.</head>
            <p>There may be appointed by the Executive Committee four
medical students (commissioned) who shall have attended at
least one full course of lectures in a regular medical college, and
who shall perform the duties of dressers or assistants, to the
surgeons and apothecary,</p>
            <pb id="hosp7" n="7"/>
            <p>They are never to leave the Hospital without the consent of
the Chief Surgeon, or Executive Committee. They shall be
allowed board and washing in the Hospital.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>SECRETARY AND CLERK.</head>
            <p>The Secretary and Clerk shall keep a full record of every
patient admitted into and discharged from the Hospital—
showing his name, age, nativity and disease or injury; also the
company and regiment to which be belongs.</p>
            <p>He shall make a memorandum of any money, clothing, or
other articles delivered to him by the patients, and hand the
same to the Treasurer or Steward for safe keeping, and do any
thing else that may be required of him by the chief Surgeon or
Executive Committee. For example, he shall receive and forward
all letters and packages directed to the care of the Hospital for
the North Carolina Volunteers in Virginia; and he shall keep a
full and accurate list of all the North Carolina Regiments and
Battalions in the service, and endeavor to keep informed of
their position and such of their wants as can be relieved from
this Hospital.</p>
            <p>He shall attend to all letters of inquiry relative to patients in
the Hospital and the North Carolina Volunteers generally, as far
as he can, keeping up a weekly correspondence with the
Surgeons of our Regiments.</p>
            <p>It shall also be his duty, under the immediate supervision of
the Surgeon in Chief, to draw up any report and furnish any
information that may be required by the Secretary of War, the
Surgeon General of the Confederate States, or the Executive
Committee.</p>
          </div3>
          <pb id="hosp8" n="8"/>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>STEWARD.</head>
            <p>The Steward shall have charge of the Commissariat of the
Hospital and attend to the marketing; take charge of all Hospital
stores, furniture of every description, supplies for the sick, and
superintend the domestic affairs of the Hospital generally. He
shall keep a roster of nurses, cooks, and attendants, and returns
for rations, according to the number in the Hospital; receive and
distribute rations, and submit his book to the chief Surgeon,
monthly for examination, or oftener if required. He will issue
stores to cooks and nurses, and enter the amount in his book.
He will be responsible for furniture, bedding, cooking utensils,
and for keeping the store room neat and clean. In the discharge
of these duties he will derive assistance from the matrons and
ward master.</p>
            <p>He shall also act as Treasurer of the Hospital, giving bond
for the faithful performance of the duties of this office.</p>
          </div3>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>MATRONS.</head>
            <p>The Matrons will assist the Steward in the general domestic
management of the Hospital, especially in looking after the
washing and cooking and nice condition of the wards, and in
seeing that the female nurses do their duty.</p>
          </div3>
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