Title: Crole, John P.

Source text: Surgeon General Joseph K. Barnes, United States Army, The Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion. (1861–65.), Part 1, Volume 2 (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1870), 408.

Keywords:wounds and injuries of the neckgunshot wounds of the neckwounds of the pharynx and œsophagusparalysis in gunshot wounds of the cervical regiongunshot wounds of the cervical nervespartial loss of motion of arm

Civil War Washington ID: med.d1e18431

TEI/XML: med.d1e18431.xml


CASE.—Private John P. Crole, Co. F, 27th Michigan Volunteers, was wounded at Poplar Grove Church, Virginia, September 30th, 1864, by a minie ball, which entered two inches above the sternal extremity of the left clavicle, emerging at the superior angle of the left scapula. He was treated in the hospitals of the Ninth Corps until October 5th, when he was admitted to Mount Pleasant Hospital, Washington, and discharged on March 20th, 1865. There was partial loss of motion of left arm. He is not a pensioner.