Dr. Manson on condition of Civil War camps, New York, 1862

Contributed by Maine State Archives

Description

Dr. John Colby Manson (1831-1885), a graduate of the University College of New York, wrote to Gov. Israel Washburn Jr. on August 15, 1862 that he was pleased to accept the position of surgeon for the area of Somerset County, "comprising Pittsfield, Canaan, Hartland, St. Albans, Palymra & Detroit with as much more as you please to add."

On October 16, 1862 he mustered into the 24th Maine Regiment at Augusta with a number of other Pittsfield residents. This regiment left Maine for New York City on October 29, 1862.

While at Camp Pierrepont in East New York (now Brooklyn), Dr. Manson wrote to Governor Washburn of the deplorable camp conditions and of his concern for the health of the men, since he was responsible for their medical needs. Three weeks later Manson was honorably discharged for medical reasons.

View/Add Comments

Transcription

Item has a transcription view a full transcription


About This Item

  • Title: Dr. Manson on condition of Civil War camps, New York, 1862
  • Creator: John Colby Manson
  • Creation Date: 1862-11-02
  • Subject Date: 1862-11-02
  • Location: East New York, Brooklyn, Kings County, NY
  • Media: Ink on paper
  • Dimensions: 24.3 cm x 19.3 cm
  • Object Type: Text

Cross Reference Searches

Standardized Subject Headings

People

Other Keywords


For more information about this item, contact:

Maine State Archives
84 State House Station, Augusta, ME 04333-0084
(207) 287-5790
Website

Use of this Item is not restricted by copyright and/or related rights, but the holding organization is contractually obligated to limit use. For more information, please contact the contributing organization. However, watermarked Maine Memory Network images may be used for educational purposes.

How to cite content on this site


Please post your comment below to share with others. If you'd like to privately share a comment or correction with MMN staff, please send us a message with this link.