I Have Observed That Horses Throughout The States
Are Treated In A Hardier Manner Than Is Usually The Case With Us.
At the period of which I am speaking - January, 1862 - the health of
the army of the Potomac was not as good as it had been, and was
beginning to give way under the effects of the winter.
Measles had
become very prevalent, and also small-pox, though not of a virulent
description; and men, in many instances, were sinking under fatigue.
I was informed by various officers that the Irish regiments were on
the whole the most satisfactory. Not that they made the best
soldiers, for it was asserted that they were worse, as soldiers,
than the Americans or Germans; not that they became more easily
subject to rule, for it was asserted that they were unruly; but
because they were rarely ill. Diseases which seized the American
troops on all sides seemed to spare them. The mortality was not
excessive, but the men became sick and ailing, and fell under the
doctor's hands.
Mr. Olmstead, whose name is well known in England as a writer on the
Southern States, was at this time secretary to a sanitary commission
on the army, and published an abstract of the results of the
inquiries made, on which I believe perfect reliance may be placed.
This inquiry was extended to two hundred regiments, which were
presumed to be included in the army of the Potomac; but these
regiments were not all located on the Virginian side of the river,
and must not therefore be taken as belonging exclusively to the
divisions of which I have been speaking. Mr. Olmstead says: "The
health of our armies is evidently not above the average of armies in
the field. The mortality of the army of the Potomac during the
summer months averaged 3 1/2 per cent., and for the whole army it is
stated at 5 per cent." "Of the camps inspected, 5 per cent.," he
says, "were in admirable order; 44 per cent. fairly clean and well
policed. The condition of 26 per cent. was negligent and slovenly,
and of 24 per cent. decidedly bad, filthy, and dangerous." Thus 50
per cent. were either negligent and slovenly, or filthy and
dangerous. I wonder what the report would have been had Camp
Benton, at St. Louis, been surveyed! "In about 80 per cent. of the
regiments the officers claimed to give systematic attention to the
cleanliness of the men; but it is remarked that they rarely enforced
the washing of the feet, and not always of the head and neck." I
wish Mr. Olmstead had added that they never enforced the cutting of
the hair. No single trait has been so decidedly disadvantageous to
the appearance of the American army as the long, uncombed, rough
locks of hair which the men have appeared so loath to abandon. In
reading the above one cannot but think of the condition of those
other twenty regiments!
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