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Massachusetts Archives

CHC

Massachusetts Military State Agency (Washington, D.C.): Hospital cards

Part of: Massachusetts Military State Agency (Washington, D.C.).

Hospital cards, 1863-1865.

ca. 10,000 slips/cards in 6 boxes
Call no.: PS1.02/733X

Scope and Content: The Massachusetts Military State Agency in Washington, D.C.,  established in 1862 and headed by Gardiner Tufts, served as a charitable and relief organization for Massachusetts soldiers during the Civil War, along with similar agencies in four other Atlantic seaboard transport centers. Its duties included the visiting of hospitals to ascertain the condition of soldiers and providing them with necessary supplies; acting for claimants of back-pay, bounties, and pensions; arranging for the interment or return to Massachusetts of the bodies of deceased soldiers; and providing information to soldiers’ families about their condition and whereabouts. After the war, the agency continued its work with pension and bounty claims, in Washington until 1870, then in Boston until 1879, when its functions were transferred from the state surgeon general to the state adjutant general.
Arrangement: Arranged alphabetically by name.
Notes: Tufts describes this information system in: Report of military agent, Washington, D.C. (In: Report of the surgeon-general, Dec. 1, 1864 (PD 7, Jan 1865), p. 60-61) –Box 1: A-Coll.  Box 2: Colm-Gi.  Box 3: Gu-K. Box 4: L-Pe.  Box 5: Pf-Smith, J.  Box 6: Smith, L.-Z
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