Fw. Reckling et Ck. Mcallister, The career and orthopaedic injuries of Joshua L. Chamberlain The hero of little roundtop, CLIN ORTHOP, (374), 2000, pp. 107-114
Citations number
14
Categorie Soggetti
Ortopedics, Rehabilitation & Sport Medicine","da verificare
Joshua L, Chamberlain, a professor of religion and oratory at Bowdoin Colle
ge, Brunswick, Maine was commissioned Lieutenant Colonel of the 20th Maine
Volunteer Regiment in August 1862, He commanded the 20th Maine Volunteer Re
giment in the historic defense of Little Roundtop against overwhelming odds
and circumstances during the pivotal battle of Gettysburg. In June 1864 wh
ile leading a charge at the battle of Petersburg, he sustained what was tho
ught to be a mortal wound when he was struck by a minie hall that entered j
ust below and anterior to his right greater trochanter, injuring vessels, t
he urinary bladder and urethra, and fracturing his pelvis. Surgery was done
in the field hospital, and after 5 months of recuperation, Chamberlain ret
urned to lead his troops in combat. After the war he was elected Governor o
f Maine for four terms and subsequently served as President of his alma mat
er, Bowdoin College, for 12 years. Despite the fact that he had chronic few
er abdominal pain, wound drainage, and a persistent urethral fistula, he li
ved a very productive life for 50 years after he was wounded at Petersburg.
Included in the current paper are commentaries on the state of the art of
surgery during the Civil War.