The Exchange Hotel & Civil War Medical Museum
400 S. Main Street
Gordonsville, Virginia
On
a trip to see our daughter in Virginia I was able to visit the last location of
my 2nd great grand uncle, the Civil War hospital where Martin Penn
Brumfield and tens of thousands of other soldiers were treated and where Martin
and 700 other soldiers died.
Martin Penn Brumfield
1837 LA - 1862 VA
Son of Nathaniel Brumfield & Charlotte Temple Ott
Martin Penn Brumfield was the oldest of five children of Nathaniel Brumfield & Charlotte
Temple Ott. He was born 15 March 1837 in Louisiana. He and his two brothers
served in the Confederate Army. At the time of his enlistment, July 1861, he
was a single farmer in Franklinton. Martin served as a 2nd lieutenant
in the Washington Rifles, Co I, 9th LA Infantry. He died April 1862.
The Civil War Museum at the Exchange Hotel is located in Gordonsville, VA. In March
1862 the Confederacy transformed the Exchange Hotel into a hospital for
soldiers from the nearby battlefields. Soldiers were taken to the hospital by
train. According to the museum’s brochure:
In one year alone, 23,000 men were treated at the Exchange; 6,000 of these were treated in just one month. The once beautifully manicured lawn and gardens around the building were churned into a sea of mud and debris as tents and crude sheds sprang up to house the overflow of wounded. The fields behind the hotel became a garden of graves that would eventually claim a harvest of more than 700 soldiers.
Today
the museum has rooms set up as they would have been when it was a thriving
tavern in the 1840s and as a hotel in the 1860s. In addition there is a
collection of artifacts related to medical care and surgery during the Civil War.
On the second floor, displayed on a wood table once used for surgery, is a
binder: The Death Roster of the Confederate and Union Soldiers who died at the
Gordonsville Receiving and Forwarding Hospital March 1862 – October 1865.
Inside the binder, the names are listed according to state. I quickly found Martin
P. Broomfield [Brumfield] who died in April 1862 of Chronic Diarrhea.
Surgical Table with Death Roster |
The Death Roster |
I
was delighted that I had found Martin’s name. After I finished touring the
rooms and taking pictures I went back to the entrance and spoke to the friendly
lady in charge. I asked her where the soldiers were buried. She said they had
been buried on the grounds. Later they were moved to Maplewood Cemetery. She
said the wooden markers had been gone for a long time. There is a large stone
memorial to the soldiers and a few individual markers. She kindly gave me
directions to the nearby cemetery. I’ll write more about the cemetery in a
future post.
Death Roster; Louisiana: Martin P Broomfield.
Sometimes when we're not in a hurry on a trip to the Shenandoah Valley, we hop off the interstate and take the slow road which goes through Gordonsville. Isn't it a cute town? However, I've never taken the time to visit the Exchange. I didn't know it had so much to offer.
ReplyDeleteStop by. You'll be glad you did.
DeleteI have missed this in my many tours of Virfginia Civil War battlefields. Hope to make it soon. Great report.
ReplyDeleteCharlie, if you go be sure to visit the cemetery also.
Delete