Titanwarrior89
Posts: 3283
Joined: 8/28/2003 From: arkansas Status: offline
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I agree with Gil. He is correct. Attrition was very bad in both armies. More so in the south. quote:
ORIGINAL: Gil R. I disagree. In the Civil War, three out of every five Union soldiers who died succumbed to disease, and for the CSA it was two out of three. Overall, 224000 Union officers/soldiers died from disease, and 164000 CSA. Now, those numbers are a bit misleading because records from the time don't distinguish between someone who died of a contagious disease and something that was the direct result of a battlefield injury. Still, those numbers give an idea of how serious a problem disease was. During the Civil War germs and bacteria still weren't understood, so measures were not taken at first to ensure proper sanitation, which led to large outbreaks of disease -- and not just among green soldiers. This is why sanitary efforts were increased during the war (and why we have a related logistics upgrade in the game). Furthermore, soldiers from isolated, rural areas had not built up immunity to big-city diseases earlier in their lives, and when exposed to them succumbed in large numbers. Overall, both armies faced epidemics of typhoid, diarrhea, dysentery, scurvy, and venereal diseases. (Scurvy just one of the problems caused by improper nutrition.) I think that disease is just as devastating in the game as it should be.
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"Before Guadalcanal the enemy advanced at his pleasure. After Guadalcanal, he retreated at ours". "Mama, There's Rabbits in the Garden"
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