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Dennis A. Rasbach MD FACS - I Am Perhaps Dying: The Medical Backstory of Spinal Tuberculosis Hidden in the Civil War Diary of LeRoy Wiley Gresham

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Invalid teenager Leroy Wiley Gresham left a seven-volume diary spanning the years of secession and the Civil War (1860-1865). He was just 12 when he began and he died at 17, just weeks after the war ended. His remarkable account, recently published as The War Outside My Window: The Civil War Diary of LeRoy Wiley Gresham, 1860-1865, edited by Janet E. Croon (2018), spans the gamut of life events that were of interest to a precocious and well-educated Southern teenagerincluding military, political, religious, social, and literary matters of the day. This alone ranks it as an important contribution to our understanding of life and times in the Old South. But it is much more than that. Chronic disease and suffering stalk the young writer, who is never told he is dying until just before his death.
Dr. Rasbach, a graduate of Johns Hopkins medical school and a practicing general surgeon with more than three decades of experience, was tasked with solving the mystery of LeRoys disease. Like a detective, Dr. Rasbach peels back the layers of mystery by carefully examining the medical-related entries. What were LeRoys symptoms? What medicines did doctors prescribe for him? What course did the disease take, month after month, year after year? The author ably explores these and other issues in I Am Perhaps Dying to conclude that the agent responsible for LeRoys suffering and demise turns out to be Mycobacterium tuberculosis, a tiny but lethal adversary of humanity since the beginning of recorded time.
In the second half of the nineteenth century, tuberculosis was the deadliest disease in the world, accounting for one-third of all deaths. Even today, a quarter of the worlds population is infected with TB, and the disease remains one of the top ten causes of death, claiming 1.7 million lives annually, mostly in poor and underdeveloped countries.
While the young man was detailing the decline and fall of the Old South, he was also chronicling his own horrific demise from spinal TB. These five years of detailed entries make LeRoys diary an exceedingly rare (and perhaps unique) account from a nineteenth century TB patient. LeRoys diary offers an inside look at a fateful journey that robbed an energetic and likeable young man of his youth and life. I Am Perhaps Dying adds considerably to the medical literature by increasing our understanding of how tuberculosis attacked a young body over time, how it was treated in the middle nineteenth century, and the effectiveness of those treatments.

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I Am Perhaps Dying
The Medical Backstory of Spinal Tuberculosis
Hidden in the Civil War Diary of LeRoy Wiley Gresham
I Am Perhaps Dying The Medical Backstory of Spinal Tuberculosis Hidden in the Civil War Diary of LeRoy Wiley Gresham - image 1
Dennis A. Rasbach, MD, FACS
I Am Perhaps Dying The Medical Backstory of Spinal Tuberculosis Hidden in the Civil War Diary of LeRoy Wiley Gresham - image 2
2018 by Dennis A. Rasbach
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Rasbach, Dennis A., author. | Supplement to (work): Gresham, LeRoy
Wiley, 1847-1865. The War Outside My Window.
Title: I am Perhaps Dying: The Medical Backstory of Spinal Tuberculosis
Hidden in the Civil War Diary of Leroy Wiley Gresham / Dennis A. Rasbach.
Description: First edition. | California: Savas Beatie [2018] | Medical
supplement to The War Outside My Window: The Civil War Diary of LeRoy
Wiley Gresham, 1860-1865 / Janet Elizabeth Croon, ed. El Dorado Hills,
California: Savas Beatie, [2018]. | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2018019244| ISBN 9781611214505 (pbk: alk. paper) |
ISBN 9781940669892 (ebk)
eISBN 9781940669892 (ebk)
Mobi ISBN 9781940669892 (ebk)
Subjects: | MESH: Gresham, LeRoy Wiley, 1847-1865. | Tuberculosis, Spinaldiagnosis | Tuberculosis,
Spinalhistory | Delivery of Health
Carehistory | American Civil War | Personal Narratives as Topic | Georgia
Classification: LCC RC310 | NLM WE 11 AG4 | DDC 616.99/5009034dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018019244
Picture 3
Savas Beatie LLC
989 Governor Drive, Suite 102
El Dorado Hills, CA 95762
Phone: 916-941-6896
(web) www.savasbeatie.com
(E-mail)
Savas Beatie titles are available at special discounts for bulk purchases in the United States by corporations, institutions, and other organizations. For more details, please contact Savas Beatie, P.O. Box 4527, El Dorado Hills, CA 95762, or you may e-mail us at for additional information.
To LeRoy Wiley Gresham,
who unwittingly left posterity one of the most
extraordinary medical accounts of life with tuberculosis in the nineteenth century,
and to
My publisher Theodore P. Savas,
whose heart was deeply touched by LeRoys story, and who felt compelled
to share it with the world.
Publishers Preface Until the spring of 2017 I had never heard of LeRoy Wiley - photo 4
Publishers Preface
Until the spring of 2017, I had never heard of LeRoy Wiley Gresham. Odds are you hadnt either.
Jan Croon, a former teacher and friend on social media living and working in northern Virginia, passed on a link to me of a 2012 article by Michael E. Ruane in the Washington Post entitled Invalid boys diary focus of Library of Congress Civil War exhibit. I receive articles like this almost daily, so I nearly skipped past it. What a mistake that would have been. I clicked the link and started reading. The lengthy story mesmerized me from the first few sentences.
The Library of Congress was featuring a large display of Civil War material to mark its sesquicentennial, among them Greshams little-known diarya seven-volume account donated by the family in the 1980s. The writer was a nearly bedridden teenage boy from a wealthy slave-holding family in Macon, Georgia. Some years earlier he had badly broken a leg that never fully healed. How he had hurt it was a mystery left unaddressed.
LeRoy (or just Loy to his family) spent 1860-1865 recording what he read, heard, observed, thought, felt, and experienced. He was a voracious reader and devoured everything he could get his hands on, including Shakespeare and Charles Dickens. Arithmetic and word problems fascinated him, as did railroads, science, and chessa game he played at every opportunity. Most of his time outside was spent in a small custom-built wagon, pulled around town by a slave about his own age or his own older brother Thomas. His last diary entry was June 9, 1865. He died eight days later.
By the time I finished reading the article, my fascination with the young lad had changed to one of curiosity. According to the Library of Congress, this remarkable account had yet to be published. The article was five years old, so surely his diaries were now readily available in book form. I searched the Internet and found a second article, this one written two years later in 2014 by the same reporter in the same paper titled Mary Greshams grief over invalid sons death echoes from 1865. The focus of this piece was a seven-page private letter written by LeRoys mother Mary to her sister shortly after LeRoy died. Marys tender soaring prose included a detailed description of LeRoys final hours. Her palpable pain at his passing tugs at ones heart strings and is, even now, difficult to read.
I kept searching. To my astonishment, other than tangential references to LeRoy or the Gresham family, there was not a single word about the diaries having been published, or that anyone was even considering doing so. How could this be? I followed the link to the Library of Congress website and spent a couple hours reading from the diaries. Then and there I made my decision and picked up the phone.
Jan, are you interested in transcribing and annotating LeRoys journals for publication? Her reply was an enthusiastic Yes! A staff member at the Library of Congress soon confirmed there were no restrictions on publishing, and that to her knowledge, no one else was preparing to publish the diaries.
Marketing director Sarah Keeney and I charted a rather expeditious course of action. Once we signed a contract with Jan, we distributed a press release announcing that Savas Beatie would be publishing the book the following yearan admittedly aggressive schedule. My hope was that the news would flush out other efforts farther along than our own, and so save us an inordinate amount of time and money. It also might discourage anyone who was thinking of transcribing and publishing them. Because of his obvious interest in LeRoys remarkable story, I emailed a copy of the press release to Washington Post reporter Michael Ruane. Michael quickly replied that he was pleased LeRoys efforts would be published, and to keep him informed as the work progressed. Michael would almost certainly have known if someone else was working on the diaries.
It looked as if the way ahead was clear.
* * *
LeRoy Gresham was 12 years old when he began writing in his first journal in 1860. The blank book was a gift from his mother so he could record his experiences with his father, John Gresham, on their upcoming trip to Philadelphia to see a medical specialist about LeRoys condition. Apparently his unhealed crushed leg was getting worse. How had he broken it?
Further research uncovered a newspaper account written many decades after the event by Macon native Albert Martin Ayres in which he reminisced about his time growing up in Georgia. It included a story about an accident that had crushed a young boys leg and left him a cripple when a chimney collapsed on him and inflicted the painful and crippling injury that left eight-year-old LeRoy a prisoner within his own young body.
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