Amy Murrell Taylor - Horrors and Healing
Horrors and Healing - The Civil War Medicine Podcast
Release Date: 09/18/2020
Horrors and Healing - The Civil War Medicine Podcast
John Lustrea speaks with Dr. Shauna Devine, a medical historian at the University of Western Ontario.
info_outline Amy Murrell Taylor - Horrors and HealingHorrors and Healing - The Civil War Medicine Podcast
John Lustrea spoke with Dr. Amy Murrell Taylor about her studies of refugee camps during the Civil War era.
info_outline Introducing Horrors and Healing: The Civil War Medicine PodcastHorrors and Healing - The Civil War Medicine Podcast
This is the introduction to the National Museum of Civil War Medicine's new podcast: "Horrors and Healing." This podcast will include interviews and stories from experts in the history of Civil War medicine.
info_outlineJohn Lustrea spoke with Dr. Amy Murrell Taylor about her studies of refugee camps during the Civil War era.
The National Museum of Civil War Medicine is located in Frederick, Maryland. The Museum is the premier center for the preservation and research of the legacy of Civil War Medical innovation and humanitarianism. As a living institution, we utilize artifacts, storytelling and the historic lessons derived from that era to educate the public and define the impact on today’s society.
You can learn more about the Museum by visiting civilwarmed.org.
Dr. Amy Murrell Taylor is an associate professor of history at the University of Kentucky. Her research focuses on the social and cultural history of the U.S. South in the 19th century. Her latest book, Embattled Freedom: Journeys through the Civil War’s Slave Refugee Camps (UNC Press, 2018), is a study of the many thousands of men, women, and children who fled slavery and sought refuge behind the lines of the Union army during the American Civil War. She previously examined families divided by national loyalties, both the realities of their lives and the images of them in popular culture, in The Divided Family in Civil War America (UNC Press, 2005). She is the co-editor, with Stephen Berry, of the “UnCivil Wars” series with the University of Georgia Press, as well as an editorial advisory board member of the Civil War Monitor magazine and a past member of the board of editors of the Journal of Southern History. She is also involved in a variety of public history and historic preservation projects in central Kentucky.