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Results for Confederate Hospital

Confederate Field Hospital

Battle of Mill Springs

This is the site of the Confederate Hospital used by Confederate surgeons after the Battle of Mill Springs. The site is being preserved with the help of a Federal grant from the Land and Water Conservation Fund, ...

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Confederate Dead & Hospitals

Here sleep 67 known and 8 unknown Confederate heroes, men who died of disease and wounds in the several Confederate hospitals located here. Many of those who died were reburied elsewhere.

In 1862, 1863, 1864, the Hill, Hood, Lumpkin, and ...

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Confederate Hospitals

Thousands of Confederate soldiers were patients at Foard Hospital on this site between August and December 1864. Following a disastrous fire and explosion on August 31, the patients were evacuated to the homes of townspeople and to the country; later ...

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Confederate General Hospital

Harrisonburg Female Academy

Harrisonburg was Rockingham County’s seat of government and largest town, and it was an ideal site for a hospital. When the Civil War began in 1861, although the railroad had not yet extended to Harrisonburg, the town sat ...

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North Carolina Confederate Hospital

Site of the

Confederate Hospital

for soldiers from

North Carolina

1861-1865

Marker is at the intersection of Brown Street and Perry Street, on the right when traveling west on Brown Street.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Ladies Confederate Hospital

Original building

of the

Ladies Confederate

Hospital

1862—1865

Marker is at the intersection of Bollingbrook Street and 3rd Street, on the right when traveling west on Bollingbrook Street.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Confederate Hospital

Confederate Hospital

1861 - 1865

“Sanctuary for valiant

and courageous men”

Built for a river tavern 1836

Placed by

Barbour County Chapter

United Daughter of the

Confederacy.

Marker is at the intersection of Riverside Drive and Front Street, on the right when traveling north on Riverside Drive.

Courtesy ...

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Confederate Dead and Hospitals

Twenty-four Confederate soldiers are buried here. These men, veterans of many hard fought battles, died in the Confederate hospitals located here, 1863-1865. They were the Hood, Hill, Lumpkin, and several temporary ones. Among the gallant Confederate women who served in ...

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Confederate Hospital

This Church was used for a

Confederate Hospital

During the War

Between The States

Erected by

General John H. Forney

Chapter U.D.C. Sept 27, 1937

Marker is on Clinton Street Southeast, on the right when traveling west.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Civil War Medicine / Montgomery's Confederate Hospitals

Side A

During the War Between the States medical knowledge was primitive. As a result, twice as many men died of disease than in battle from wounds. Early in the War, childhood diseases such as measles, mumps and chicken pox decimated ...

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