Operating at Sea

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This is from the National Museum of Civil War Medicine (looks scary to me!):

The struggles of a US Navy surgeon while operating on a sailor at sea Acting Assistant Surgeon Ezra Pray aboard the U.S. Bark Fernandina remembered a long and frustrating night at sea, facing the unique challenges of naval surgery:

"We are off Hatteras; and I hoped the wind would continue good so that I could get my patient into the Hospital ship before he dies; but we have the wind dead ahead, and the sea is mountain high. I control the sick man's pulse with tr. of Veratrum Viride and his pains with morphia, his wounds being kept covered with cold water dressing – often changed. I got no sleep last night and stand no chance to get any to night. But 12 is the clock, and an unhappy day is ended."

Source:
Entry for April 5, 1862, Transcript of Journal of Acting Assistant Surgeon Ezra Pray US Bark Fernandina: September 1861-April 1862.

Image credit:
Detail from sketch by C. Ellery Stedman, "The Surgeon's station in the 'Fornots' is the ward-room," US Army Heritage and Education Center Collection.

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