JACKSON, Tenn. — Oct. 30, 2013 — An exhibit honoring African Americans who served in healthcare professions during the Civil War will be displayed at 51社区鈥檚 Emma Waters Summar Library Nov. 2-Dec. 14.
The 鈥淏inding Wounds, Pushing Boundaries: African Americans in Civil War Medicine鈥 exhibit is provided by the U.S. National Library of Medicine鈥檚 traveling exhibition program. The exhibit consists of six panels featuring photos and facts about how African Americans helped heal the wounded during the war.
鈥淭he involvement of African Americans in Civil War medicine is a part of history that鈥檚 not well known,鈥 said Paul Sorrell, the creative projects coordinator for library services. 鈥淭he panels tell a new story of an old event.鈥
Anna Beth Morgan, the associate professor of library services and associate vice president for academic resources, said Union is the first location in West Tennessee to showcase these panels.
The exhibit will be located inside the library to the right of the entrance. At least one case of Civil War artifacts will be displayed near the panels as well. Medical antiquities on loan from Jackson鈥檚 Carnegie Center for the Arts and History, the Brooks Shaw Collection from the Old Country Store and the Jackson-Madison County General Hospital will be displayed.
The library also will host a reception and presentations for the exhibit Nov. 7. The reception will begin at 6:30 p.m. in the library, where attendees can view the panels and artifacts. Presentations will follow at 7:30 p.m. in room D-3 in the Penick Academic Complex.
For the presentations, David Thomas, a professor of history, will discuss the war鈥檚 historical significance while Jill Webb, a professor of nursing and the assistant director of the Honors Community, will talk about the war鈥檚 medical aspects.
Morgan said local social studies classes may visit the exhibit as well, and a detailed curriculum for both children and young adults is available for teachers who wish to incorporate the exhibit into their lesson plans.
鈥淚t鈥檚 important to respect the work that African Americans have done,鈥 Morgan said. 鈥淭he exhibit itself was birthed out of an understanding that the role of African Americans in the Civil War, particularly in healthcare, has been understated through the years.鈥
For more information about the exhibit curriculum, visit www.nlm.nih.gov. To learn more about the exhibit itself, contact Melissa Moore, Union鈥檚 public services librarian, at (731) 661-5408.