Browsing named entities in The Photographic History of The Civil War: in ten volumes, Thousands of Scenes Photographed 1861-65, with Text by many Special Authorities, Volume 7: Prisons and Hospitals. (ed. Francis Trevelyan Miller). You can also browse the collection for J. M. Gill or search for J. M. Gill in all documents.

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s who served during the war is not practicable; nor is it important in this connection, since a physical examination was made by the surgeons for each reenlistment as well as enlistment. Besides the above total, some 67,000 men enlisted in the regular army, of whom probably one-third was not credited to any State. All this meant additional work. Third division, ninth corps, August, 1864 Surgeons of the second division, ninth corps, October, 1864 An army surgeon at City Point Dr. J. M. Gill their friends in the Northern States and former military associates remaining under the old flag. But the remaining twenty-four merely transferred their services to the military forces of the Confederacy, where they were promptly given the positions of responsibility and power which their previous experience and training warranted. These men formed the nucleus about which the Medical Department of the Confederacy was created, building it up along the administrative lines to which the
s who served during the war is not practicable; nor is it important in this connection, since a physical examination was made by the surgeons for each reenlistment as well as enlistment. Besides the above total, some 67,000 men enlisted in the regular army, of whom probably one-third was not credited to any State. All this meant additional work. Third division, ninth corps, August, 1864 Surgeons of the second division, ninth corps, October, 1864 An army surgeon at City Point Dr. J. M. Gill their friends in the Northern States and former military associates remaining under the old flag. But the remaining twenty-four merely transferred their services to the military forces of the Confederacy, where they were promptly given the positions of responsibility and power which their previous experience and training warranted. These men formed the nucleus about which the Medical Department of the Confederacy was created, building it up along the administrative lines to which the