One minor correction, if I may. As you mentioned, Dr. Simon Baruch initially accepted a commission as assistant surgeon of the 3rd South Carolina Battalion on April 4, 1862. But in August of that same year, he transferred to the 13th Mississippi Infantry Regiment as a full surgeon. He was in this 13th MS when captured at Gettysburg, not the 3rd SC Battalion. Following his release from captivity, he rejoined the 13th in 1864 and served until the war's end.
I have living histories at the Black Horse Tavern Farm on the Saturday of the 4th of July. Dr. Baruch book is a must read Dr. Baruch and Dr. Monterio both wrote great books….Great job with the presentation!!!!!!
Nice, I graduated from a junior high school in NYC named after him! Interestingly, Dr. Simon Baruch was the father of Bernard M. Baruch! I graduated from a college named after his son as well!
When I was a fledgling theater student at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point in the 1970s, my advisor was a Dr. Baruch. Bob Baruch. I wonder if there's any relation, since the name is the same and my Dr. Baruch resembles the photo very closely of your Dr. Baruch!
I read somewhere that early in the war both sides agreed that medical people, when captured, would be immediately paroled to continue doctoring. I wonder if this is true.
In 2 days, it will be 162 years to the day, of the Battle of Shiloh. As Shelby Foote Civil War Historian and writer explained, he would visit each of the Civil War battle sites on the month and day of the battle to get an idea of how it might have looked during the battle.
Hey Ron - years ago I read a story of Gettysburg where a family of Quaker’s had a farm in the area - one of the Son’s of the family had run off to the South and became a slave owner to the families great shame & disgust & he was formally 0:04 disowned - it turns out that he fought & died with the confederates very near his family home - he was buried in a mass grave near their porch and the family refused to acknowledge him at all - is this story in your research?
Books, newspapers, letters, journals and other primary source documents. Some are found in searches and others from free and subscription databases. Hope this helps!
This is great content! I can clearly picture the scenes as though they were filmed. I suppose we can put that down to the fact that, despite the utter savagery of the Civil War, there were civilized men on both sides of the conflict whose literacy far exceeds today's hordes of victims of a public school system that does violence to the concept of education, wherein college graduates can't spell, don't understand how to use punctuation, and have difficulty constructing a grammatically correct sentence. In listening to such well articulated narratives as this, it strikes me that in some ways, so many folks were far more civilized back then. Yet, at the same time, they were inclined to march off to participate in a brutal war, inflicting unimaginably horrific mass slaughter on each other. It kind of pegs the irony meter.
In regard to the consumed peacock, I must admit I've also liked the Spanish name: "Pavo Real", literally Royal Turkey. 🦚 I still remember them from my youth & wandering the grounds of the old Del Monte Hotel @ the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, CA when my father was a student there.
One minor correction, if I may. As you mentioned, Dr. Simon Baruch initially accepted a commission as assistant surgeon of the 3rd South Carolina Battalion on April 4, 1862. But in August of that same year, he transferred to the 13th Mississippi Infantry Regiment as a full surgeon. He was in this 13th MS when captured at Gettysburg, not the 3rd SC Battalion. Following his release from captivity, he rejoined the 13th in 1864 and served until the war's end.
I have living histories at the Black Horse Tavern Farm on the Saturday of the 4th of July. Dr. Baruch book is a must read Dr. Baruch and Dr. Monterio both wrote great books….Great job with the presentation!!!!!!
Nice, I graduated from a junior high school in NYC named after him! Interestingly, Dr. Simon Baruch was the father of Bernard M. Baruch! I graduated from a college named after his son as well!
Lord,if they knew who he was, the name would be struck from the school by morning!
When I was a fledgling theater student at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point in the 1970s, my advisor was a Dr. Baruch. Bob Baruch. I wonder if there's any relation, since the name is the same and my Dr. Baruch resembles the photo very closely of your Dr. Baruch!
Ron, enjoy watching all your post! Doing a great job!
I read somewhere that early in the war both sides agreed that medical people, when captured, would be immediately paroled to continue doctoring. I wonder if this is true.
Great description from the medical officer Ron.
In 2 days, it will be 162 years to the day, of the Battle of Shiloh. As Shelby Foote Civil War Historian and writer explained, he would visit each of the Civil War battle sites on the month and day of the battle to get an idea of how it might have looked during the battle.
Didn’t rain a lot on the 4th?
Hey Ron - years ago I read a story of Gettysburg where a family of Quaker’s had a farm in the area - one of the Son’s of the family had run off to the South and became a slave owner to the families great shame & disgust & he was formally 0:04 disowned - it turns out that he fought & died with the confederates very near his family home - he was buried in a mass grave near their porch and the family refused to acknowledge him at all - is this story in your research?
Well, don't leave us hanging.. surely he described his 2 years of being a POW/Camp doctor..
Here's the rest of the story: archive.org/details/confederateveter22conf/page/544/mode/2up?q=baruch
Where are you finding these accounts ?
Books, newspapers, letters, journals and other primary source documents. Some are found in searches and others from free and subscription databases. Hope this helps!
This is great content! I can clearly picture the scenes as though they were filmed. I suppose we can put that down to the fact that, despite the utter savagery of the Civil War, there were civilized men on both sides of the conflict whose literacy far exceeds today's hordes of victims of a public school system that does violence to the concept of education, wherein college graduates can't spell, don't understand how to use punctuation, and have difficulty constructing a grammatically correct sentence.
In listening to such well articulated narratives as this, it strikes me that in some ways, so many folks were far more civilized back then. Yet, at the same time, they were inclined to march off to participate in a brutal war, inflicting unimaginably horrific mass slaughter on each other. It kind of pegs the irony meter.
he got captured twice, first to give medical services, second just to interrupt a well earned dinner
alright, guy.
Of course, this was the father of Bernard Baruch: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Baruch
WOW!
In regard to the consumed peacock, I must admit I've also liked the Spanish name:
"Pavo Real", literally Royal Turkey. 🦚 I still remember them from my youth & wandering the grounds of the old Del Monte Hotel @ the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, CA when my father was a student there.
They sure are noisy creatures lol.
@@JohnnyButtons
Indeed, they can surely scare the daylights out of you if you're not aware they're lurking around.
🦚😳😆