- Joined
- Feb 5, 2017
From the National Museum of Civil War Medicine (with permission)
"Death from a Spider Bite?"
A newspaper account from October 1862 describes the horrific death of a North Carolina soldier from a spider bite.
"Whilst putting on his boots, (at Drury's Bluff, where he was stationed) Captain [B.R.] W[illiams] unfortunately shut up a spider in one of them, which by frequent stings, infused sufficient poison into his system to produce death within eighteen hours, despite all the efforts of surgeons to counteract it."
Source:
"The Charlotte Democrat," Charlotte, North Carolina, October 14, 1862.
Image credit:
"The Spider's Web," from "The Playbook of Metals…" by John Henry Pepper, 1862)
"Death from a Spider Bite?"
A newspaper account from October 1862 describes the horrific death of a North Carolina soldier from a spider bite.
"Whilst putting on his boots, (at Drury's Bluff, where he was stationed) Captain [B.R.] W[illiams] unfortunately shut up a spider in one of them, which by frequent stings, infused sufficient poison into his system to produce death within eighteen hours, despite all the efforts of surgeons to counteract it."
Source:
"The Charlotte Democrat," Charlotte, North Carolina, October 14, 1862.
Image credit:
"The Spider's Web," from "The Playbook of Metals…" by John Henry Pepper, 1862)
