Carol Helmstadter
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The financial costs of war
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Because of the skilful and very effective Russian defense, the French had to keep enlarging their army; the French did not have the financial resources of the British and became unable to supply the larger army properly. The commissariat’s failure to send items such as pressed vegetables led to the outbreak of scurvy and other diseases. Following the fall of Sevastopol on 8 September 1855 many of the doctors and the trained soldier nurses died of disease, and in December typhus completely overwhelmed the medical service. Many nurses died and were replaced with commandeered soldiers who lacked the zeal and aptitude of the trained men. Nevertheless, the doctors and soldier nurses managed to give the same generous efficacious care to Russian prisoners as well as to their own men. The French, following the Russian example, trained the better educated and more talented convalescents and soldier nurses to do a number of medical procedures, which the chief doctor thought saved the department from total collapse. The winter of 1855–56 was a total reversal of the previous winter when the French were well supplied and the British were starving.

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