Binding Wounds, Pushing Boundaries -- African Americans in Civil War Medicine

A very interesting site (click the title) concerning a little-known (at least to me) role that many African Americans played in the Civil War.  The site has a number of great educational resources to help inform as to how the Civil War, in many ways, actually helped to break down the barriers preventing blacks from careers in medicine. It was, of course, quite some time before they were fully accepted in to the medical sphere, as racism “had not ended with the 13th and 14th amendments to the Constitution.”

The site is up at the National Library of Medicine website, and it is a collection that has much potential for students of the Civil War, African American history, or the history of medicine.

There is also a bit of information on how medicine was actually practiced during the Civil War, and what challenges were inherent in treating such large numbers of people in such small camps, particularly with injury and disease being so prevalent.

Let me know your thoughts on the exhibition.