- Joined
- Feb 5, 2017
From The National Museum of Civil War Medicine - This is something I never knew!
The Confederate laboratories in Lincolnton, North Carolina; Tyler, Texas; Augusta and Macon, Georgia; and Columbia, South Carolina; Michael Flannery identifies the South Carolina lab as producing ether.
"By November 1864, a total of thirty-two depots and field purveyors stretching from Richmond to San Antonio." "In Columbia, South Carolina, surgeon J. Julian Chisolm (1830-1903) asked for and received the single-largest Confederate warrant for medical supplies, over $850,000, issued on April 13, 1864."
Image credit:
Via @The Laboratory Mill
The Confederate laboratories in Lincolnton, North Carolina; Tyler, Texas; Augusta and Macon, Georgia; and Columbia, South Carolina; Michael Flannery identifies the South Carolina lab as producing ether.
"By November 1864, a total of thirty-two depots and field purveyors stretching from Richmond to San Antonio." "In Columbia, South Carolina, surgeon J. Julian Chisolm (1830-1903) asked for and received the single-largest Confederate warrant for medical supplies, over $850,000, issued on April 13, 1864."
Image credit:
Via @The Laboratory Mill