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I'm curious as to whether this factors in men who died after extended illnesses. The description of his methodology suggests that it may. I've always wondered how many men were missed in the death toll because they made it home only to die, months or years later, of wounds or illnesses contracted in service.
I agree with Becky in that I also have always wondered how many deaths after the war by veterans had as a cause either wounds or all that exposure to the elements during the war.
Marc Riddell
1st Minnesota Co D
2nd USSS Company C
Potomac Legion
We'll never know the true figure, but the post-war death toll must surely run into the thousands. In General Joshua Chamberlain's case, the wound he received at Petersburg didn't ultimately do him in until 1914.
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