
















 
|
 |
Historic Pelham Blog Archive
June 3, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Friday, June 3, 2005
David's Island Off the Coast of Pelham Manor During the Civil War
On May 8, 1862, a brief item appeared in The New York Times that
read: "A hospital for sick and wounded Union soldiers, will be established
on David's Island, 25 miles up the East River. Suitable buildings are now
in the course of erection under the superintendence of the United States
Quartermaster's Department." The Army And Navy, N.Y. Times, May
8, 1862, p. 7. David's Island near Davenport's Neck, New Rochelle, was
among the islands that formed part of the lands acquired by Thomas Pell
from local Native Americans on June 27, 1654. Today's Blog posting will
provide a little background regarding the island's service as the site of
a military hospital during the American Civil War.

Detail from Plate 36 of Beer's Atlas Published in 1868
Showing David's Island
On April 13, 1862, only three weeks before The New York Times
announcement quoted above, Simeon Leland leased the island for five years
to the United States Government for $2,000 a year with a purchase option
that could be excerised for $38,500. See Westchester County
Records of Land Conveyances, Liber 495, Folio 380. The government
immediately began building the planned military hospital.
Once the hospital facilities had been constructed, the hospital treated
both Union soldiers and Confederate prisoners of War. Additionally, by the
end of the War, the United States Government constructed a prison camp
that housed 3,000 Confederate prisoners.
On August 13, 1862, a newspaper account noted the following:
"There are now about 900 sick and wounded soldiers at the hospitals on
David's Island. Since their conveyance there a large number have died, but
the great majority are doing well, and fast recovering. The air is cool
and bracing, the ladies near-by-resident are kind and thoughtful, and the
nursing is of the very best kind. The weekly reports from the Island are
unsurpassed -- desirably."
The Sick and Wounded on David's Island, N.Y. Times, Aug. 13,
1862, p. 3.
There are many contemporary accounts of the hospitals on the island.
See, e.g., Government Hospital on David's Island. The
Patients and Their Nurses, N.Y. Times, Aug. 31, 1862, p. 3. One
such account shows how quickly the hospital facilities at the island grew
and how overwhelming the numbers of sick and wounded soon became. The
account, in its entirety, reads as follows:
"The Soldier's Hospital on David's Isle.
ITS LOCATION, DIMENSIONS, AND GENERAL MANAGEMENT -- PERFECT HARMONY
BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENTAL AND VOLUNTEER DEPARTMENT -- ACCOMMODATIONS
PRESENT AND PROSPECTIVE -- WHAT IT HAS, AND WHAT IT NEEDS -- EXPRESS
ACCOMMODATIONS, ETC., ETC.
The Government Hospital for sick and wounded soldiers, established during
the past season on David's Island, is getting to be an institution of such
magnitude and importance as to deserve a more extended notice than it has
yet received from the public Press. Already the largest in the United
States, its accommodations are rapidly increasing, and its location,
sanitary advantages, and general management, and such as to justly entitle
it to the distinction of being in every respect a model institution of its
kind.
David's Island (named after its owner, Mr. David,) is located in Long
Island Sound, opposite the village of Flushing, and about twenty-five
miles from New-York. It contains, at high tide, about eighty-five acres,
and previous to being leased to the Government, was used as a pasture
ground, and had upon it only one dwelling -- a spacious country mansion,
now occupied by the military commandant, surgeons and doctors. It has a
rocky foundation, affording abundance of pure water, its air is
salubrious, and the surrounding country is unsurpassed in beauty.
In April last the Island was leased to the Government for five years, at
an annual rent of $2,000, and on the 23d of May preparations were
completed for the reception of soldiers, at which date 200 invalids were
removed thither. From that time to the present the accommodations have
been rapidly increased, until there are now some 2,500 soldiers on the
Island, and preparations are nearly completed to receive 1,100 more. The
Government has spent about $200,000 in the erection of buildings,
draining, digging wells &c.; and a careful inspection of the numerous
structures, and the large amount of work performed, would satisfy the most
testy grumbler that the money had been economically expended. The
buildings arranged in rows, with ample streets between, and are all
painted white, with green blinds, presenting a neat, comfortable and tidy
appearance. There are 20 hospitals, or pavilions, as they are called, and
10 mess-rooms -- the latter standing at intervals between the pavilions.
The pavilions are 250 feet long, 25 feet wide, and 20 feet high, with
ample ventilation at the top. The mess rooms are 85 feet long, and of the
same width and height as the pavilions. At one end of each mess room is a
kitchen capable of cooking for 160 persons, and in addition to these is a
general kitchen, capable of cooking for 2,000 persons, and a bakery which
can turn out 3,000 loaves of bread per day. Besides these, are three other
kitchens for the volunteer associations, of which more anon. A large
centre building is also being erected, and nearly completed, for the
accommodation of the officers in charge of the Island, surgeons,
apothecaries, clerks, &c. In addition to these buildings, which are as
well built substantial structures, are 250 hospital tents with board
floors, each accommodating 10 patients.
The military commandant of the Island is Capt. P. C. Morgan, of the
regular army, and the hospitals are under the charge of Dr. J. Simons,
also of the regular army, who is Surgeon-in-Chief, and Dr. E. Lee Jones,
of the volunteer service. Each hospital or pavilion also has its separate
doctor, and the entire medical corps is composed of men skilled in their
profession, and constant and faithful in their attendance.
Thus much for the Government provisions for the welfare of the sick and
wounded soldier; but there is another feature in the hospital none the
less comforting to the poor invalid, and for which he is even more
grateful -- a feature which redounds to the credit of our common humanity,
while it reflects the highest honor upon the noble army of sympathetic and
kind hearted women who originated and still carry it forward. This is the
volunteer department of the hospital, and its labor is a labor of love. As
before stated, there are three volunteer kitchens from which delicacies
are furnished to the patients, such as no Government, however generous it
may be, has ever yet put down in the soldiers' bill of fare. One of these
kitchens is occupied by an association of ladies from Yonkers, another by
the ladies of New-Rochelle and Glen Cove, and the third by the ladies of
Pelham, Brooklyn and New-York. Soon after the hospital was established,
and before accommodations had been completed for the convenient working of
volunteer associations, there was some clashing between the Government
employes and the volunteers, but now each have their appropriate quarters
assigned to them, as well as their appropriate sphere of operations, and
the utmost harmony prevails. Both of the surgeons in command, as well as
the doctors, freely express their obligations to the ladies who conduct
the volunteer department, and the happy smiles and cheerful looks which
light up the countenances of the poor soldiers as these ministering angels
pass through the hospital wards, show plainly enough how fully and how
gratefully they appreciate their services.
The articles from the volunteer kitchens are dispensed only on the written
orders of the surgeons and doctors, so that there can be no complaint of
interference with the physician's regimen, or that the patient was killed
by too much 'stuffing.'
To show what drafters the doctors find it convenient to make upon the
ladies' larder, we give below a list of dishes dispensed from the Yonkers
Kitchen on Sunday last:
Toast, 400 plates; jelly, 18 plates; baked apples, 100; roast beef, 35
plates; roast chicken, 40 plates; beef tea, 30 bowls; chicken broth, 18
bowls; tea many cups; bread pudding, 70 plates; rice pudding 18 plates;
custard, 10 plates; corn bread and mush, 14 plates, gruel, 14 bowls;
scalded milk, 8 bowls; crackers, 12 plates; biscuit, 120; hash, 36 plates;
squash, 10 plates; corn-starch, 29 plates; peaches, 29; oranges, 25;
lemons, 12; pears, 10; stewed do, 39; clam broth, 8 bowls; bread and milk,
8 bowls; potatoes, 10; milk punch, 200 tumblers; pickles, 12.
The above is only one of the volunteer kitchens for one day, and is
exclusive of the large number of articles of clothing that are distributed
daily.
The amount of good accomplished by these volunteer associations, acting
systematically and under proper regulations, and harmoniously cooperating
with the Government officers in charge, as they now do at this hospital,
is incalculable. Much might be said, and deservedly, of the
self-sacrificing labors of the noble women who spend their days and
nights, for weeks together, in superintending their several departments
and administering to the wants of the poor soldiers; but, to such as they,
deeds of charity bring their own reward and need no trumpeting. Suffice it
to say that they are ladies who move in the best society of their
respective locales, and who cheerfully leave homes of comfort and ease to
carry gladness and joy to the feverish couch of their country's defenders.
From the prayers of the dying soldier in their behalf, and from the
blessings of the living, they receive their reward.
It need hardly be said that those volunteer associations require large
and constant supplies in the way of contributions, and that they appeal in
the strongest language to the public for aid. The women are doing their
part, and more; and it is for the benevolent male public to see that they
do not lack for material. Arrangements are about being made by which all
contributions for either of the associations can be left at the offices of
Westcott's City Express, whence they will be dispatched to the island. The
Government boat, the Washington Irving, leaves the Battery from
the north side of Castle Garden every morning at 9 1/2 o'clock, and, when
it is convenient, articles may be sent to the boat by the donor from 8 1/2
o'clock to the hour of starting.
Yesterday, the patriotic fruit dealers of Washington Market sent up
fifteen or twenty baskets of peaches, which were distributed among the
soldiers by Rev. Mr. J. S. Holmes, of the Pierrepont Baptist Church,
Brooklyn, who has spent his entire Summer vacation on the island,
administering to the wants of the soldiers, and to whom the citizens of
Brooklyn can apply for full information as to the character of the
volunteer department of the hospital, and the kind of contributions being
faithfully and economically dispensed.
There is one thing greatly needed at the island, and the want of which,
if it is suffered to continue, may yet result in terrible disaster. There
is no fire-engine of any description on the island, and the buildings
being entirely of wood, there is imminent danger of a conflagration,
which, if it should take place, must inevitably result in great loss of
life. It is the duty of the Government to supply this want, and we were
glad to hear yesterday that steps were to be taken immediately to procure
a steam fire-engine.
Another thing lacking on the island is music. The soldiers frequently
express a desire to hear some of the patriotic airs which they were
accustomed to hear in the field. If some of our City bands would make an
occasional excursion to the island, and give the poor fellows a serenade,
they would find an audience of eager and grateful listeners, to whom they
would render a patriotic service."
Source: The Soldier's Hospital on David's Isle, N.Y. Times,
Sep. 11, 1862, p. 2.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:26 AM
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
June 3, 2005.
Home |
Articles |
Bibliography |
Biographies |
E-books |
Ghosts/Legends |
Links |
Maps
Memorials |
Pelham in Court |
Photo Catalog |
Place Names |
Postcards |
Societies |
Timeline
Virtual Tour |
Contact Us
© 2003-2005 Blake A. Bell. All Rights Reserved.
Designed by
Internetcomealive,
Inc.
Web Design, Hosting, Consulting |
 |
 |