"Civil War Medicine" Documentary Trailer Completed!
Civil War Rx
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5y ago
The trailer for the "Civil War Medicine" documentary series is here! We spent months on the research, recorded the voiceovers and music live, worked with 11 different institutions for the amazing images. If you would like to make a tax-deductible contribution to completion of the four-part "Civil War Medicine" documentary series, you can use the PayPal button on this website. We hope you enjoy the trailer! You can see it at https://youtu.be/wCXmOx6C_ZU ..read more
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Dr. Alfred Bollet Interviews
Civil War Rx
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5y ago
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VIEW THE "CIVIL WAR MEDICINE" TRAILER HERE!
Civil War Rx
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5y ago
VIEW THE "CIVIL WAR MEDICINE" TRAILER HERE! https://youtu.be/wCXmOx6C_ZU ..read more
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The Mystery of the Glow-in-the-Dark Civil War Soldiers
Civil War Rx
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5y ago
By Lauren Davis, 4-7-12 The American Civil War Battle of Shiloh left 16,000 soldiers dead and 3,000 soldiers wounded, and some of those wounded soldiers are part of an odd mystery. Some of the soldiers had eerily glowing wounds, which healed more quickly than the non-glowing wounds. So what strange battlefield science was at work? It took two days and nights for the medics to reach all of the wounded soldiers in Shiloh, and some of the soldiers noticed that their wounds glowed in the darkness. Because the glowing wounds healed more quickly and cleanly, the mysterious force was termed "Angel ..read more
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Prisons of the Civil War: An Enduring Controversy
Civil War Rx
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5y ago
By Michael E. Haskew, 2-13-17 All the horrors of prison life were experienced by hundreds of thousands of captives, Union and Confederate, during the Civil War. The June 19, 1861, editorial in the Charleston Mercury newspaper warned: “War is bloody reality, not butterfly sporting. The sooner men understand this the better.” During the four-year course of the Civil War, the entire country—North and South—would come to the same grim realization. There were seemingly endless lists of thousands of soldiers killed or wounded in battle or dead of disease. Thousands more, both Union and Confederat ..read more
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Ann Bradford Stokes
Civil War Rx
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5y ago
From: s3.amazonaws.com Stokes (1830-1903), an illiterate African American woman born into slavery in Tennessee, served as a “contraband” (escaped slave) nurse on the hospital ship USS Red Rover, the first Union Naval ship, from January 1863 to October 1864. She also received regular wages of a “first-class boy.” Notably, she was among the first women to serve as a nurse in the United States Navy and the first to serve on a U.S. military vessel. In 1890, after years of unsuccessful petitions for a pension, Stokes reapplied for a pension based on her 18 months of service in the Navy instead o ..read more
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Black Women After the Civil War: African American Women in Postbellum America
Civil War Rx
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5y ago
By Maggie MacLean 9-14-16 After the Civil War, African American women were promised a new life of freedom with the same rights provided to other American citizens. But the newly freed women in the South had little or no money, limited or no education and little access to it, and racism impacted every area of their lives. The transition from enslavement to freedom was a difficult and frightening one for most black women who emerged from enslavement knowing "that what they got wasn't what they wanted; it wasn't freedom, really." The Civil War promised freedom to African American women, but as ..read more
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Ann Preston: First Woman Medical School Dean
Civil War Rx
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5y ago
By Maggie MacLean, 10-10-2012 Ann Preston (December 1, 1813–April 18, 1872) was a doctor and educator of women in Pennsylvania. One of the most notable achievements of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in the 19th century was the role it played in the entrance of women into medicine. Ann Preston was one of those pioneer Quaker women doctors. Through her leadership and her persuasive influence, Dr. Preston promoted educational, professional and social changes that eventually established the right of women to study medicine and removed the barriers which blocked the path of those wom ..read more
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Black Soldiers, Blue Uniforms – Blood On The Snow
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5y ago
By John Walker, 6-3-16 Confederate survivors of the Battle of Franklin shivered in their thinly held lines outside Nashville as the Black soldiers made their advance. As the exhausted Confederate survivors of the Battle of Franklin shivered in their thinly held lines outside Nashville, Union General George H. Thomas prepared to launch a devastating, if much delayed, frontal assault. Although several overzealous Union Army field commanders organized African Americans into ad hoc militia units early in 1862 and several black regiments were mustered into service later that year, it wasn’t unt ..read more
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Documentary Production Update
Civil War Rx
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5y ago
Great production progress has been made on the "Civil War Medicine" documentary trailer. We recorded all of the voiceovers at Philadelphia Post; some live in the studio; some remote. The actors were from Pennsylvania, Delaware, Oregon and Wisconsin. They all did a great job. Musicians recorded piano, fiddle, banjo and drums live. The unusual historical images you will see onscreen were provided by many excellent American museums, libraries, National Parks--the list is quite long! These are a few shots of the  Philly Post studio where we recorded. Stay tuned for the trailer's release bef ..read more
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