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The Unknown Soldiers of Brown Hospital

These Confederate soldiers, all serving in the Georgia Militia, died at Brown Hospital in Milledgeville and were buried at

this location. Their names soon became lost, and they were concidered Unknown Soldiers until 2003 when their identies

were discovered.

(Left Column)

Marion ...

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Field Hospital

After the Battle of Shiloh, Federal soldiers buried the dead, and medical officers faced the enormous task of caring for the 16,400 wounded. Many were crowded onto steamboats for transport to Northern cities, while others were taken to nearby homes. ...

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Confederate Hospital Camp

100 yards southeast is the location of a Confederate Hospital Camp established in the summer of 1864. Soldiers wounded in battles around Atlanta were brought by train to Forsyth. The buildings at the college and other buildings in Forsyth were ...

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Japanese Kuwabara Hospital

The Nishiura Brothers built this Colonial Revival structure in 1910. Named after its first resident physician from Japan, Dr. Taisuka Kuwabara, the Kumamoto Kenjin-kai (a prefectural association) established the hospital to serve the Japanese community. In 1934 the Japanese Association, ...

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From Church to Hospital

As the tumult of battle subsided, new sounds filled the air; the cries and moans of wounded soldiers. Two days of fighting around Salem Church left about 4,000 men killed or wounded. As soon as the battle ended, Confederate surgeons ...

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Hospital of St. Vincent dePaul

Founded in 1855, the Hospital of St. Vincent dePaul was Norfolk’s first civilian hospital. Located two blocks south at the corner of Church and Wood strees, the hospital was opened in the home of Ann Plume Behan Herron by eight ...

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Mount Jackson General Hospital, CSA

Shenandoah at War

In September 1861, the Confederate Medical Department built a large general hospital on this site because Mt. Jackson was the western terminus of the Manassas Gap Railroad which provided access to northern Virginia battlefields. Dr. Andrew Russell Meem, ...

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Civil War Hospital Site

Samuel Pry Mill

Civil War Hospital Site

Samuel Pry Mill

Was used as a hospital during

The Maryland Campaign 1862

Private Property

courtesy of S.H.A.F.

Marker is on Keedysville Road ½ mile west of Shepherdstown Pike (Maryland Route 34), on the right when traveling east.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Shawnee Springs Hospital

Clearing and Evacuation Facility

Valley Campaigns

Federal medical authorities established the largest temporary hospital of the Civil War in the aftermath of the Third Battle of Winchester on September 19, 1864. Union Gen. Philip H. Sheridan's medical director, Surgeon James T. Ghiselin, ...

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Mercy Hospital

Founded in 1847 by the Sisters of Mercy as Pittsburgh's first hospital. Medical internships began in 1848, and the nursing school in 1893. This was the first Mercy hospital worldwide, caring for all patients, especially the community's poor.

Marker is on ...

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