Excerpt from Handbook for the Hospital Corps of the U. S: Army and State Military Forces
1. A hospital is the shelter or quarters provided for the sick and wounded of a command; but in an enlarged sense it includes the provision made for the cure of the disabled, with no special reference to the shelter or building that may be used. When a hospital is attached to a stationary command it is a post hospital; if it accompany the command on an expedition or campaign, it is a field hospital; if it be detached from the command, and particularly if it receive the sick and wounded of any command, it is a general hospital.
Chapter I.
The Post Hospital, And The Hospital Corps.
2. The regulation post hospital building at permanent military posts is of brick, arranged for 12,24, or 36 beds, heated by hot water, and ventilated through brick flues and galvanized iron ducts; but as a matter of fact the building may be any kind of a shelter extemporized or utilized for the care of the sick and wounded.
3. The service of the post hospital is performed by members of the Hospital Corps enlisted for, and permanently attached to, the Medical Department. Enlisted men who have served one year in the line may be transferred to the Hospital Corps as privates. Married men are not accepted as recruits, nor transferred from the line for service in the corps.
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