X-ray . ^^^^^m- 232 Ci)e J^Eap, 1914 ^^. Hospital Corps First Regiment Infantry, Virginia Volunteers HE Hospital Corps of the First Regiment, Infantry, VirginiaVolunteers, consisting entirely of men engaged in the prac-tice or study, of medicine, is the only one of its kind in theUnited States. Its officers are connected with the teaching staff, andthe enlisted men with the student body of the Medical Collegeof Virginia. Major J. Fulmer Bright, the commanding officer,—j holds an honorable position as Emeritus Professor of Anat-omy. Captain Giles B. Cook, instructor in medicine, is at present e
X-ray . ^^^^^m- 232 Ci)e J^Eap, 1914 ^^. Hospital Corps First Regiment Infantry, Virginia Volunteers HE Hospital Corps of the First Regiment, Infantry, VirginiaVolunteers, consisting entirely of men engaged in the prac-tice or study, of medicine, is the only one of its kind in theUnited States. Its officers are connected with the teaching staff, andthe enlisted men with the student body of the Medical Collegeof Virginia. Major J. Fulmer Bright, the commanding officer,—j holds an honorable position as Emeritus Professor of Anat-omy. Captain Giles B. Cook, instructor in medicine, is at present engagedin forming the most important adjunct of the State militia—the first fieldhospital in Virginia, a well equipped, complete and transportable hospitalunder canvas. Captain A. A. MarsteUer, instructor in Neurology and Psychi-atry, and First Lieutenant Harry F. White, of Staunton, complete the prerequisite for enlistment in the corps is competency on the part of thestudent in his medical studies. The character of the men
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Keywords: ., bookauthormedicalcollegeofvirgi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910