Hillsborough (NC) Recorder

August 7, 1861

Page 4

 

AMBULANCES

An ambulance is a moving hospital attached to any army for the purpose of

rendering immediate assistance to sick or wounded soldiers.  It will perhaps interest the reader to have a description of the ambulances captured by our troops after the battle of Manassas:

            The body is fifty inches wide, and is divided into two compartments, each one entered by means of a door at the rear.  The driver sits outside, entirely away from the sufferer, and is protected from inclement weather by an adjustable calash top.  The ambulance has four steel springs resting on the flexible hickory shafts, and the bed on which the patient lies is also supported by four other steel springs, to which are attached small wheels to facilitate the movement in and out of a wounded soldier, without his rising.  The bed and mattress is a decidedly ingenious arrangement, and should be seen to be fully understood.  Either end can be raised at any elevation desirable, made into a good pillow at an instant.  A small trapdoor in the centre of the bed, worked by means of a spring and bolt, affords a convenience to the sufferer that can easily be appreciated.  If the weather is warm, and the sun too hot to admit of hoisting curtains, a turn of a button unloosens a section of the side which drops down upon its hinges, and the cool air can pass through (and over the inmate,) while the curtains still shut out the rays of the sun.  Several also have a rack over the bed, where trunks or any clothing desirable can be placed, and everything that would conduce to the comfort of the wounded be immediately within his reach.  In fact, the new ambulance is a complete moveable hospital, in which the sufferer can rest at ease, forgetful that he is in the camp or upon the deserted battlefield.

 

[Transcribed by Sharon Strout]