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Combat and Medical Technology in the Civil War. Mr. White’s US History 1. Big Questions. How did new weapons technologies affect how people fought and what they experienced on the battlefield? How did Civil War doctors care for the wounded?. Tactics Before the Civil War - Weapons.
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Combat and Medical Technology in the Civil War Mr. White’s US History 1
Big Questions • How did new weapons technologies affect how people fought and what they experienced on the battlefield? • How did Civil War doctors care for the wounded?
Tactics Before the Civil War - Weapons • Weapon used before the Civil War was the smoothbore musket • Barrel (the part the bullet travels through) was smooth on the inside • Ball was a sphere (not a bullet shape) • Bullet would leave the barrel with a spin on it – changed direction • Was accurate to about 50 yards
Tactics Before the Civil War - Formations • Men were placed in line two or three deep to maximize firepower • Men would fire in volleys – everyone shoots at once • Battle • Close to within range • Fire one or two volleys • Charge with the bayonet – pointed weapon on the end of the rifle
New Weapons – Rifled Musket • Minie ball was used – typical bullet shape • Barrel of the weapon was rifled – spiral grooves to give the bullet spin • Ball left barrel spinning on axis – much more accurate
Changes in Combat • Weapons are now accurate over 200 yards • Firing rate is increased – three aimed shots per minute • Bayonet charge became obsolete – why? • Advantage shifted in favor of the defender • Higher casualty rates
Effects of the Minie Ball • Slow muzzle velocity – would change direction on impact (tumble, ricochet) • Soft lead – tended to flatten and distort on impact • Would pull pieces of clothing and dirt into the wound • Would shatter bones
Artillery – The Big Guns • Solid shot – typical cannon ball, used against infantry • Case shot – explosive, filled with small balls, fired high to explode overhead of troops • Grape shot – cluster of metal balls held together by twine, balls would spray out as they left the cannon • Canister shot – canister filled with shrapnel, sawdust, pieces of metal; short-range shotgun effect
Edged Weapons • Bayonets – fixed onto the end of muskets for hand-to-hand combat • Swords – carried by officers or cavalry, rarely used • Casualties from edged weapons were rare in the Civil War – more often happened by accident
Hospitals in the Civil War - Wounds • Those wounded in the chest, head, or abdomen were usually left to die on the battlefield as their survival was unlikely. • Those wounded in the extremities had a chance of survival
Extremity Wounds • Amputation of the wound was usually the only course of action, especially if the wound had hit bone, or the bullet (or parts of it) stayed in the wound • The closer the amputation was to the trunk of the body, the more likely amputation would result in death • Infection was usually quite likely, and the person would have to be able to fight it off
Medical Technology - Amputations • Painkillers and anesthetics were available, but were usually addictive drugs – morphine, opium, or when those weren’t available, hard liquor • Often done outside, during the day – why? • Tourniquet would be used to stop the blood flow. • Stiff, serrated bone-saw would be used to saw through flesh and bone • Amputated limbs simply thrown in a pile
New Technology • Even though the Civil War seems backwards when it comes to medical technology, they did have some advances • Hypodermic syringe – first used in the Civil War • Advanced ideas of field hospitals, mobile surgery unites, advancement of the roles of nurses • No concept of blood- or fluid-based germs – idea was that a clean surgical space had fewer problems • No concept of antiseptic practices