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U.S. Sanitary Commission Report No. 1: An Address To The Secretary Of War |
| CREATOR: |
Bellows, Henry W., Elisha Harris, J. Harsen, W. H. Van Buren (authors) |
| DATE: |
May 18, 1861 |
| SOURCE: |
Available at selected libraries |
Page 1: | | | | 1 | AN ADDRESS
TO THE
SECRETARY OF WAR
| | | | 2 | TO THE SECRETARY OF WAR:
| | | | 3 | SIR: The undersigned, representing three associations of the
highest respectability in the city of New York, namely, the Woman's
Central Association of Relief for the Sick and Wounded of the Army,
the Advisory Committee of the Boards of Physicians and Surgeons of the
Hospitals of New York, and the New York Medical Association for
furnishing Hospital Supplies in aid of the Army, beg leave to address
the Department of War in behalf of the objects committed to them as a
mixed delegation with due credentials.
| | | | 4 | These three associations, being engaged at home in a common object,
are acting together with great efficiency and harmony to contribute
towards the comfort and security of our troops, by methodizing the
spontaneous benevolence of the city and State of New York ; obtaining
information from the public authorities of the best methods of aiding
your Department with such supplies as the regulations of the Army do
not provide, or the sudden and pressing necessitities of the time do
not permit the Department to furnish; and in general, striving to play
into the hands of the regular authorities in ways as efficient and as
little embarrassing as extraofficial cooperation can be.
| | | | 5 | These associations would not trouble the War Department with any
call on its notice, if they were not persuaded that some positive
recognition of their existence and efforts was essential to the peace
and comfort of the several Bureaus of the War Department itself. The
present is essentially a people's war. The hearts and minds, the
bodies and souls, of the whole people and of both sexes throughout the
loyal States are in it. The rush of volunteers to arms is equalled by
the enthusiasm and zeal of the women of the nation, and the clerical
and medical professions vie with each other in their ardor to
contribute in some manner to the success of our noble and sacred
cause. The War Department will hereafter, therefore, inevitably
experience, in all its bureaus, the incessant and irresistible motions
of this zeal, in the offer of medical aid, the applications of nurses,
and the contribution of supplies. Ought not this noble and generous
enthusiasm to be encouraged and utilized? Would not the Department win
a still higher place in the confidence and affections of the good
people of the loyal States, and find itself generally strengthened in
its efforts, by accepting in some positive manner the services of the
associations we represent, which are laboring to bring into system and
practical shape the general zeal and benevolent activity of the women
of the land in behalf of the Army? And would not a great economy of
time, money, and effort be secured by fixing and regulating the
relations of the Volunteer Associations to the War Department, and
especially to the Medical Bureau?
| | | | 6 | Convinced by inquiries made here of the practical difficulty of
reconciling the aims of their own and numerous similar associations in
other cities with the regular workings of the Commissariat and the
Medical Bureau, and yet fully persuaded of the importance to the
country and the success of the war, of bringing such an arrangement
about. The undersigned respectfully ask that a mixed Commission of
civilians distinguished for their philantrophic experience and
acquaintance with sanitary matters, of medical men, and of military
officers, be appointed by the Government, who shall be charged with
the duty of investigating the best means of methodizing and reducing
to practical service the already active, but undirected benevolence of
the people toward the Army; who shall consider the general subject of
the prevention of sickness and suffering, among the troops, and
suggest the wisest methods, which the people at large can use to
manifest their goodwill towards the comfort, security, and health of
the Army.
| | | | 7 | It must be well known to the Department of War that several such
commissions followed the Crimean and Indian
wars. The civilization and humanity of the age and of the American
people demand that such a commission should
precede our second war of independence--more sacred than the
first. We wish to prevent the evils that England and France could only
investigate and deplore. This war ought to be waged in a spirit of the
highest intelligence, humanity, and tenderness for the health,
comfort, and safety of our brave troops. And every measure of the
Government that shows its sense of this, will be eminently popular,
stregthen its hands, and rebound to its glory at home and abroad.
| | | | 8 | The undersigned are charged with several specific petitions,
additional to that of asking for a Commission for the purposes above
described, although they all would fall under the duties of that
Commission.
| | | | 9 | 1. They ask that the Secretary of War will order some new rigor in
the inspection of volunteer troops, as they are persuaded that under
the present State regulations throughout the country a great number of
underaged and unsuitable persons are mustered, who are likely to swell
the bills of mortality in the Army to a fearful percentage, to
encumber the hospitals, and embarrass the columns. They ask either for
an order of reinspection of the troops already mustered, or a summary
discharge of those obviously destined to succumb to the diseases of
the approaching summer. It is unnecessary to argue the importance of a
measure so plainly required by common humanity and economy of life and
money.
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