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Lindsay Rae Smith Privette, "The Surgeon's Battle: How Medicine Won the Vicksburg Campaign and Changed the Civil War" (UNC Press, 2025)

Apr 4, 2026
Lindsay Rae Smith Privette, historian and author specializing in Civil War medical history and Vicksburg, discusses how medical organization shaped the 200-mile campaign and siege. She highlights reforms in army medicine, the toll of disease and sanitation, tensions between surgeons and commanders, and surprising research finds about burials and caregiver experiences.
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ANECDOTE

Author's Vicksburg Roots Shaped The Project

  • Lindsay grew up in Vicksburg and worked as a National Park Service ranger at the Vicksburg battlefield.
  • That childhood and ranger experience shaped her lifelong interest and led her to combine Vicksburg and Civil War medical care for her research.
INSIGHT

Managerial Reforms Drove Civil War Medical Success

  • Civil War military medicine improved most through managerial reforms rather than new treatments.
  • William Hammond centralized medical supplies and Jonathan Letterman created the ambulance corps and tiered hospitals in 1862, transforming battlefield care.
INSIGHT

Letterman's Systems Became Lasting Battlefield Medicine

  • Letterman's ambulance corps and tiered hospital system proved highly effective and were widely adopted by war's end.
  • The ambulance corps first appeared at Antietam and hospitals at Fredericksburg, earning Letterman the title father of battlefield medicine.
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