• Am. J. Surg. · Oct 1992

    Biography Historical Article

    Samuel Preston Moore: Surgeon-General of the Confederacy.

    • P N Purcell and R P Hummel.
    • Department of Surgery, University of Cincinnati Medical Center, Ohio 45267-0558.
    • Am. J. Surg. 1992 Oct 1; 164 (4): 361-5.

    AbstractSamuel Preston Moore was trained as a military surgeon in the US Army but resigned his commission and was appointed Surgeon-General of the Confederate States Army Medical Department at the beginning of the American Civil War. He reformed the mediocre medical corps by raising recruiting standards and improving treatment protocols and by placing the most capable surgeons in positions of authority. He improved the ambulance corps and directed the construction of many new hospitals for Confederate casualties. He was directly responsible for the barracks hospital design, which is still used today. He established the Confederate States Medical and Surgical Journal and directed a successful effort to develop substitutes for scarce pharmaceuticals from the indigenous flora of the South. He founded the Association of Army and Navy Surgeons of the Confederate States of America. With skill and dedication, Dr. Moore transformed the medical corps into one of the most effective departments of the Confederate military and was responsible for saving thousands of lives on the battlefield.

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