Author Topic: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?  (Read 3168 times)

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Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« on: April 04, 2012, 05:53:11 pm »
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-17604991

3 April 2012 Last updated at 19:37 ET


Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?


About 26,000 soldiers were killed, wounded or missing after the Battle of Antietam, making 17 September 1862 one of the bloodiest days in US history

A study suggests a previously widely accepted death toll of the US Civil War may actually be way under the mark. How many did perish in this conflict, fought before the era of modern record-keeping and DNA identification?

The US Civil War was incontrovertibly the bloodiest, most devastating conflict in American history, and it remains unknown - and unknowable - exactly how many men died in Union and Confederate uniform.

Now, it appears a long-held estimate of the war's death toll could have undercounted the dead by as many as 130,000. That is 21% of the earlier estimate - and more than twice the total US dead in Vietnam.

The Civil War began in 1861 when southern slave-holding states, fearing the institution of slavery was under threat in a nation governed by northern free states, seceded from the US after the election of President Abraham Lincoln.

It ended in 1865 with the surrender of the southern, or Confederate forces, to the Union army; slavery was officially abolished by constitutional amendment that year.


Proportionate to the US's 2012 population, 7.5m US soldiers died in the War; above, Arlington Cemetery

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Offline Rapunzel

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Re: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« Reply #1 on: April 04, 2012, 06:42:05 pm »
How many are going to die in the next civil war?
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Oceander

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Re: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« Reply #2 on: April 06, 2012, 12:16:57 am »
Those who were shot dead on the field of battle fared much better than those who were wounded and died later on.  large bore musket balls fired at relatively low speeds (relative to today's firearms) and medical care more akin to a first-aid kit than a triage or surgery unit left many to die in excruciating pain.

Offline Charlespg

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Re: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« Reply #3 on: April 20, 2012, 12:32:02 pm »
interesting
i came across this on yahoo(us civil war civilian deaths)

http://www.blog4history.com/2008/06/civilian-casualties-as-a-direct-result-of-the-civil-war/
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Re: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« Reply #4 on: April 20, 2012, 01:06:04 pm »
Those who were shot dead on the field of battle fared much better than those who were wounded and died later on.  large bore musket balls fired at relatively low speeds (relative to today's firearms) and medical care more akin to a first-aid kit than a triage or surgery unit left many to die in excruciating pain.

Yep.  Couple that with military tactics that called for marching masses of troops under fire toward the artillery that is shooting at them, as well as charging fixed positions of massed troops firing muskets and rifles en masse, then it is no wonder why the casualty lists are only estimates. 

These battles did not leave nice neat corpses all in a row, ready to be neatly buried in a prepared grave.  We're talking about acres of freshly chopped meat, human and horse, scattered all over the battlefield in various stages of decomposition by the time the remains could be gathered.  People today have little concept of what actual wartime conditions are like in this Country because we have not had open warfare on this soil since the end of the Civil War. 

People today also have no idea of how incredibly brutal and barbaric warfare was during the 1800's and on worldwide.  Accuracy and power of weapons increased exponentially while the tactics to use them effectively took tens of thousands of casualties to learn. 

The mighty British Army was taught about marksmanship the hard way in South Africa by the Boers, who sat up in the hills and cut the British to pieces with their Mauser rifles, which outranged the British muskets and primitive rifles by several degrees of magnitude. 

Read about the Napoleonic Wars, and some of the savage battles that were fought with cannons shooting solid iron balls at masses of marching troops.  The Battle of Trafalgar never had a true accounting of the number of casualties either, since the French and Spanish fleets did not keep accurate records of their crews, and all parties threw the dead bodies over the side during the battle, just to clear the decks.  It is very difficult to sink wooden ships with cannonballs, you slaughter the crews inside them instead by bouncing 6" iron balls around inside like a BB in a tin can; whichever ship loses the most crew first loses the battle, and the ship was taken a prize.

World War I was also incredibly brutal, with casualties on both sides far beyond anything that would be considered acceptable today.  The British Army Officers were infamous for leading charges of men directly into German machine guns, and of course there was the chemical warfare too.

Accurate tolls after major battles are a modern phenomenon and "missing in action" used to be an almost expected outcome.



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Re: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« Reply #5 on: December 08, 2013, 03:12:39 am »
The lowest figure is 620,000. Then it was revised to 700,000. Then the number has again been revised to 800.000 men. A "casualty" is a military person lost through death, wounds, injury, sickness, internment, capture, or through being missing in action. Most casualties and deaths in the Civil War were the result of non-combat-related disease.  For every three soldiers killed in battle, five more died of disease.  There were an estimated 1.5 million casualties reported during the Civil War.

New Estimate Raises Civil War Death Toll

By GUY GUGLIOTTA
 
 
For 110 years, the numbers stood as gospel: 618,222 men died in the Civil War, 360,222 from the North and 258,000 from the South — by far the greatest toll of any war in American history.

But new research shows that the numbers were far too low.

By combing through newly digitized census data from the 19th century, J. David Hacker, a demographic historian from Binghamton University in New York, has recalculated the death toll and increased it by more than 20 percent — to 750,000.

The new figure is already winning acceptance from scholars. Civil War History, the journal that published Dr. Hacker’s paper, called it “among the most consequential pieces ever to appear” in its pages. And a pre-eminent authority on the era, Eric Foner, a historian at Columbia University, said:

“It even further elevates the significance of the Civil War and makes a dramatic statement about how the war is a central moment in American history. It helps you understand, particularly in the South with a much smaller population, what a devastating experience this was.”

The old figure dates back well over a century, the work of two Union Army veterans who were passionate amateur historians: William F. Fox and Thomas Leonard Livermore.

Fox, who had fought at Antietam, Chancellorsville and Gettysburg, knew well the horrors of the Civil War. He did his research the hard way, reading every muster list, battlefield report and pension record he could find.

In his 1889 treatise “Regimental Losses in the American Civil War, 1861-1865,” Fox presented an immense mass of information. Besides the aggregate death count, researchers could learn that the Fifth New Hampshire lost more soldiers (295 killed) than any other Union regiment; that Gettysburg and Waterloo were almost equivalent battles, with each of the four combatant armies suffering about 23,000 casualties; that the Union Army had 166 regiments of black troops; and that the average Union soldier was 5 feet 8 1/4 inches tall and weighed 143 1/2 pounds.

Fox’s estimate of Confederate battlefield deaths was much rougher, however: a “round number” of 94,000, a figure compiled from after-action reports. In 1900, Livermore set out to make a more complete count. In his book, “Numbers and Losses in the Civil War in America, 1861-65,” he reasoned that if the Confederates had lost proportionally the same number of soldiers to disease as the Union had, the actual number of Confederate dead should rise to 258,000.

And that was that. The Fox-Livermore numbers continued to be cited well into the 21st century, even though few historians were satisfied with them. Among many others, James M. McPherson used them without citing the source in “Battle Cry of Freedom,” his Pulitzer-winning 1988 history of the war.

Enter Dr. Hacker, a specialist in 19th-century demographics, who was accustomed to using a system called the two-census method to calculate mortality. That method compares the number of 20-to-30-year-olds in one census with the number of 30-to-40-year-olds in the next census, 10 years later. The difference in the two figures is the number of people who died in that age group.

Pretty simple — but, Dr. Hacker soon realized, too simple for counting Civil War dead. Published census data from the era did not differentiate between native-born Americans and immigrants; about 500,000 foreign-born soldiers served in the Union Army alone.

“If you have a lot of immigrants age 20 moving in during one decade, it looks like negative mortality 10 years later,” Dr. Hacker said. While the Census Bureau in 1860 asked people their birthplace, the information never made it into the printed report.

As for Livermore’s assumption that deaths from disease could be correlated with battlefield deaths, Dr. Hacker found that wanting too. The Union had better medical care, food and shelter, especially in the war’s final years, suggesting that Southern losses to disease were probably much higher. Also, research has shown that soldiers from rural areas were more susceptible to disease and died at a higher rate than city dwellers. The Confederate Army had a higher percentage of farm boys.

Dr. Hacker said he realized in 2010 that a rigorous recalculation could finally be made if he used newly available detailed census data presented on the Internet by the Minnesota Population Center at the University of Minnesota.

The center’s Integrated Public Use Microdata Series had put representative samples of in-depth, sortable information for individuals counted in 19th-century censuses. This meant that by sorting by place of birth, Dr. Hacker could count only the native-born.

Another hurdle was what Dr. Hacker called the “dreadful” 1870 census, a badly handled undercount taken when the ashes of the war were still warm. But he reasoned a way around that problem.

Because the census takers would quite likely have missed as many women as men, he decided to look at the ratio of male to female deaths in 1870. Next, he examined mortality figures from the decades on either side of the war — the 1850s and 1870s — so that he could get an idea of the “normal” ratio of male to female deaths for a given decade. When he compared those ratios to that of 1860-70, he reasoned, he would see a dramatic spike in male mortality. And he did. Subtracting normal attrition from the male side of the equation left him with a rough estimate of war dead.

It was a better estimate than Fox and Livermore had produced, but Dr. Hacker made it clear that his was not the final answer. He had made several assumptions, each of which stole accuracy from the final result. Among them: that there were no war-related deaths of white women; that the expected normal mortality rate in the 1860s would be the average of the rates in the 1850s and 1870s; that foreign soldiers died at the same rate as native-born soldiers; and that the War Department figure of 36,000 black war dead had to be accepted as accurate because black women suffered so terribly both during and after the war that they could not be used as a control for male mortality.

The study had two significant shortcomings. Dr. Hacker could make no estimate of civilian deaths, an enduring question among historians, “because the overall number is too small relative to the overall number of soldiers killed.” And he could not tell how many of the battlefield dead belonged to each side.

“You could assume that everyone born in the Deep South fought for the Confederacy and everyone born in the North fought for the Union,” he said. “But the border states were a nightmare, and my confidence in the results broke down quickly.”

With all the uncertainties, Dr. Hacker said, the data suggested that 650,000 to 850,000 men died as a result of the war; he chose the midpoint as his estimate.

He emphasized that his methodology was far from perfect. “Part of me thinks it is just a curiosity,” he said of the new estimate.

“But wars have profound economic, demographic and social costs,” he went on. “We’re seeing at least 37,000 more widows here, and 90,000 more orphans. That’s a profound social impact, and it’s our duty to get it right.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/03/science/civil-war-toll-up-by-20-percent-in-new-estimate.html?_r=0&pagewanted=print
« Last Edit: December 08, 2013, 03:18:26 am by SPQR »

SPQR

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Re: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« Reply #6 on: December 08, 2013, 03:26:51 am »
I have been to Antietam.

Oceander

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Re: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« Reply #7 on: December 08, 2013, 03:57:15 am »
The entire US population in 1860 was approximately 31 million, which means that, in approximate terms, the Civil War killed about 2.4% of the entire US population at the time.  For comparison's sake, the US population in 2010 was approximately 309 million, so the number of deaths necessary to equal the percentage killed in the Civil War would be approximately 7.4 million.

That should put some perspective on the devastation caused by the Civil War.

SPQR

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Re: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« Reply #8 on: December 08, 2013, 03:58:33 am »
The entire US population in 1860 was approximately 31 million, which means that, in approximate terms, the Civil War killed about 2.4% of the entire US population at the time.  For comparison's sake, the US population in 2010 was approximately 309 million, so the number of deaths necessary to equal the percentage killed in the Civil War would be approximately 7.4 million.

That should put some perspective on the devastation caused by the Civil War.

That's correct

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Re: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« Reply #9 on: December 08, 2013, 07:57:39 pm »
I have been to Antietam.
Visiting any of the Civil War battlefields can be a moving experience and I'd encourage everyone here to make the trip if at all possible. We've most recently been to Gettysburg and Manassas (Bull Run) and need to return, as more than just a few hours in one day are nowhere near enough to do them justice. The sites of lesser-known battles, e.g., Rich Mountain, Droop Mountain, etc., also are worth a visit.
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Re: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« Reply #10 on: December 08, 2013, 09:58:54 pm »
I wonder when Obama and the progressives/communists/muslims will close the battlefields and take away another piece of history.  You know it will happen.

SPQR

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Re: Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?
« Reply #11 on: December 08, 2013, 11:37:38 pm »
Visiting any of the Civil War battlefields can be a moving experience and I'd encourage everyone here to make the trip if at all possible. We've most recently been to Gettysburg and Manassas (Bull Run) and need to return, as more than just a few hours in one day are nowhere near enough to do them justice. The sites of lesser-known battles, e.g., Rich Mountain, Droop Mountain, etc., also are worth a visit.

I agree.