Civil War Lodge of
Research No. 1865.
The American Civil War
1861 - 1865 has captured the imagination of many as the greatest war fought on
the American Continent.
It was a war fought by Americans against Americans, great battles and brilliant Generals, bold tactics, stunning victories and crushing defeats. Men on opposing sides in this war, went to the same military school, fought in previous wars together on the same side and in some cases were members of the same Lodge.
In 1995, The Grand Lodge
of Virginia chartered The Civil War Lodge of Research No. 1865. The aims of the
Lodge were to investigate and research all aspects of Freemasonry in the war.
One of the main features of the Lodge was to re-create regimental field Lodges.
These meeting were held during Civil War re-enactments which took place to mark
famous battles.
When I joined the CWLR, I
began to correspond with the Treasurer Marty
In October 2003, I visited
Virginia and met my good friends, Marty Zuckerman, Bill Copenhaver, Wayne Price
and Richard Radi who made sure that my short stay was packed with Civil War
experiences.
Marty Zuckerman is the
owner of a metal recycling business in Front Royal, Virginia but he is
also the regimental surgeon for the 13th. Virginia Volunteer Infantry, a Civil
War re-enactment group. Marty has collected a complete Civil War field hospital,
including instruments and medicines. During re-enactments he stages a realistic
leg amputation on one of his soldiers, using the orginal methods of the day and
including pints of pigs blood. Marty does this for a reason, "I use the
realism to show the horror of war". he said. Marty belongs to the
regiment`s H company, known throught the Civil War as the "Winchester
Boomerangs" a small tenacious group of residents who fought for the
Confederacy.
During the war H company
averaged between 20 and 25 members and got the Boomerang name because in a fight
they just kept coming back.
Incomplete records make it
difficult to say just how many men from Winchester fought with the 13th.
throughout the war, but some records indicate that the regiment had around 550
men at one point.
About 1,500 men served
with the regiment during the four years of the war with 808 killed.
Serving as assistants to
the regimental surgeons, field surgeons set up shop in abandoned barns or
pitched their tents in culverts and other land depressions or along stone walls
- anywhere that offered a little protection from the fighting and the elements.
They marked their stations with a red flag, good access to water and shade were
essential. "People think that a Civil War doctor as a man with a knife in
one hand and a bottle of liquor in the other", but Civil War doctors were
experienced physicians who utilized the latest medical knowledge and laboured
under intense conditions.
Advances in firearms
during the war led to a drastic difference in the nature of battle injuries.
Soldiers went from firing round balls that would beak bones when they hit, but
sometimes only bruised the skin - to a grouved minnie ball that ripped through
skin and shattered bones. Napoleonic battle tactics were stiull used during the
war - lining troops up shoulder to shoulder and marching directly at each other.
"Whichever side couldn`t stand their ground lost the battle".
Such tactics caused
dreadful casualties.
If you were wounded you
were moved to the regimental hospital where surgeons extracted bullets, set
bones, dressed wounds and amputated limbs. The patient was anesthetized with
cloroform or ether, which was administered through a funnel held over the nose
and mouth of the patient. When the operation or amputation was complete the
patient was given morphine or another pain killer before being brought back to
consciousness with ammonia. The worry after surgery was gangrene.
"Doctors tried to use
broth and and liquor to bolster the immune system". Modern medicine
understands that shock is systematic - that is it affects the whole body. But in
the 19th. century, doctors thought that shock was psychological, so that they`d
give the wounded alcohol to calm them down. Nor did they understand infection,
many surgeons would only clean their their instruments when they became so
clogged up that they had difficulty in using them. Needless to say blood
poisoning and infection were rampant. "More people died from infection than
injury".
Marty explained that
doctors finally started doing the right things near the end of the war, even
though they couldn`t explain why their new methods worked. For instance, they
didn`t know how malaria was spread, but learned to avoid setting up hospital in
swampy areas where
"The only good thing
to come out of the war were the medical advances". said Marty.
Membership of The Civil
War Lodge is open to all Master Masons who are clear in the books of their
Mother Lodge. Brethren affiliate to the Lodge and become full members without
having to take an obligation to affiliate as is required in Scotland.