Civil War hospitals grew to five in Quincy

Quincy's location on the Mississippi River made it an excellent port for the riverboats that brought sick and wounded soldiers from battles of the Civil War's western theater.
Residents of Quincy and the surrounding area were loyal to the Union cause, hosted a great many soldiers passing through, and were known for their generosity in providing for them. Four months after the start of the war, Quincy opened its first hospital with two well-known Quincy physicians, Dr. Nichols and Dr. E.G. Castle, in charge. The hospital chemist (druggist) was E.W. Hope.
The start of the war found the Union woefully unprepared for casualties, lacking supplies and hospitals. Communities found themselves needing a place for the wounded and supplies for their comfort and convalescence. The Needle Pickets, an organization of Quincy women dedicated to the Union cause and founded May 31, 1861, supported the hospital and the subsequent ones that opened in Quincy, as did the Good Samaritans, also formed by Quincy women for war relief in July 1861. These groups supplied clothes, linens, food and bandages among other items. They ministered to the sick and wounded by visiting them in hospitals and taking them into their homes.
L.A. Horsman of Rockford came to Quincy in May 1862 to visit his son and described the city as having two hospitals, one for the wounded and one for the sick. Hospital No. 1 was located on the west side of Fifth between Ohio and Delaware. It was a large brick building, 150 feet by 100 feet, on a lot originally owned by former Gov. Joel A. Matteson but later deeded to the state. It remained open throughout the war, closing in 1865. It was considered a general hospital with its first four cases arriving from Missouri on Aug. 2, 1861, to find an almost empty building. During its first three months, the hospital treated 605 cases, with 18 deaths.
Late in 1864, Mrs. S.A.M. Blackford, the chief female nurse at the hospital, was dismissed by order of Maj. D.G. Brinton, surgeon, U.S. Vols., who was in charge of general hospitals in Quincy. Mrs. Blackford was the former owner of a millinery shop at 25 Fifth. She had noticed that the food for the soldiers "was inferior in quality and insufficient in quantity."
Feeling unable to get the attention of those in charge, she circulated a petition among the soldiers and took it to Gov. Richard Yates in Springfield. Her dismissal was because she was using "unmilitary conduct in appealing to the civil authorities."
Hospital No. 2 opened in May 1862 because of the need to accommodate growing numbers of casualties from the battle of Shiloh, fought April 6 and 7, 1862, at Pittsburg Landing, Tenn. The first 80 casualties arrived April 17 on the steamer Black Hawk under Capt. Brand. Forty stayed in Quincy, and the rest were sent home to recover or went farther north on the railroad. Dr. I.T. Wilson was in charge of Hospital No. 2 with Dr. Reuben Wood as his assistant. It was located on the east side of Fifth between Maine and Jersey. Mrs. E.J. Bushnell was matron.
In May 1862 Congress passed a bill allowing President Abraham Lincoln to appoint chaplains to Army hospitals, largely because of the influence of Lincoln's friend and prominent Quincyan Orville H. Browning. Horatio Foote was appointed chaplain for the Quincy hospitals, and later, in 1863, the Rev. Dr. Samuel Hopkins Emery of the Congregational Church was appointed. Dr. Emery said, "Not a soldier from the Quincy hospitals was buried in our beautiful burial grounds on the river bank without a burial service."
Hospital No. 3 opened in October 1862 on the northeast corner of Sixth and Spring. Dr. Bailey was in charge under Dr. Nichols. When opened, it was to be used only when the two other hospitals were full. That changed as the war went on and more hospitals opened.
Hospital No. 4 opened in April 1863. It was located in the Quincy German and English Methodist College on Spring between Third and Fourth. Dr. D.C. Owen was the surgeon in charge. In February 1864, the four Quincy hospitals were renamed Division Hospitals Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4 and placed under the supervision of Brigade Surgeon Nichols. In July 1864, The Quincy Whig reported a number of soldiers in transit who were being sent to the various Quincy hospitals, saying, "We are glad to learn that Quincy is to be made the general rendezvous for all the sick, wounded and disabled soldiers of our State."
Hospital No. 5 opened Sept. 24, 1864, and was located on the prairie east of 12th Street and north of Broadway, where the old barracks were fitted for hospital use. The surgeons on duty were Dr. Dickerhoff, Dr. Lewis and Dr. Manfred with Clarinda Olin as chief matron. In late 1864, while thanking the Good Samaritans for supplies received, the staff invited the women to visit and said, "Our buildings do not present a very impressive appearance in exterior, but we can show a nice, comfortable, well kept quarters within."
In April 1865, staff members under Dr. Dickerhoff solicited garden seeds as they desired a vegetable garden "… pro- viding important and pleasant food, healthful and agreeable exercise, and also as to the point of economy to the Government." In May 1865, they dedicated a reading room for which the soldiers contributed $150.
The hospital transferred its last patient on July 19, 1865. Its staff had taken care of 1,237 patients and reported 18 deaths. Their statistical report to the community ended with, "The glorious termination of this war closes the Hospital, and it is to be hoped that no institution of the kind may be needed again in our day."
Arlis Dittmer is a retired medical librarian. During her 26 years with Blessing Health System, she became interested in medical and nursing history -- both topics frequently overlooked in history.
Sources
"A Certificate." The Daily Whig Republican, February 20, 1865, 1.
"A Pleasant Time at Hospital No. 5". The Quincy Whig, May 27, 1865, 2.
Constitution and By-laws of The Needle Pickets of the City of Quincy: Together with a Report of their
Proceedings from May 31, 1861 to May 31, 1862. Quincy, IL: Whig and Republican Power Press Print, 1862.
Emery, Rev. Dr. Samuel Hopkins. "Quincy Women in the War". The Quincy Morning Whig, January 11, 1898.
Gay, Capt. William H. The Quincy Army Hospitals during the Civil War. [Speech]. Historical Society of Quincy, April 21, 1914. "Millinery Establishment." The Daily Whig Republican. February 19, 1859.
"Matters at Hospital No. 5." The Quincy Whig, December 31, 1864, 3.
"Recruits for our Hospitals." The Quincy Whig, July 30, 1864, 3.
"Seed wanted for a Hospital Garden." The Quincy Whig, April 1, 1865, 3.
Horsman, L.A. "The Quincy Hospitals." The Quincy Whig Republican, June 7, 1862, 2.
Upton, Henry B. "Statistics of Div. No. 5 U. S. General Hospital, Quincy, Ill." The Quincy Whig Republican, July 22, 1865, 2.





