Robert,
According to Bristol's website,
http://www.visitbristoltnva.org/civil-war-in-bristol
<http://www.visitbristoltnva.org/civil-war-in-bristol> the
Exchange Hotel was a Confederate Hospital. Since the Railroads were state
chartered before the War, Bristol was a logical choice because it is in two
states.
http://www.tricities.com/archives/article_a39b79b7-7e20-534c-9941-589f11c16553.html
provides
specific information on the Exchange Hotel.
I hope this helps,
Eric
On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 4:18 PM, Robert Vejnar <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> I am assisting a researcher who is trying to locate sources that could
> help him in his search to confirm that the Exchange Hotel in Bristol was
> used as a Confederate hospital during the war. He has located the
> Confederate States Medical and Surgical Journal (1864) which includes
> Bristol in the list of hospital sites, but it doesn't say anything about
> what building was used as the actual hospital. I have found an obituary in
> the 4 March 1864 Abingdon Virginian which states a Wilson P. McReynolds of
> the 21st Va. Cavalry died "in the Hospital at Bristol, Va., on the 15th day
> of Dec., 1863", but it doesn't say the hotel was being used as a hospital.
>
> The researcher has found a statement in Goodspeed's History of Tennessee
> Counties (1887) that claims that the Exchange Hotel was a Confederate
> hospital, but he's looking for a more contempory source. He's also going
> to examine the Bristol Southern Advocate newspaper (microfilm,March
> 1862-March 1863) to see if he can find any references. If anyone knows of
> additional primary sources that could be consulted please let us know.
> Thanks.
>
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--
Eric J. Richardson
Master's of Arts in History
Master's of Arts Candidate in English
North Carolina Central University
Durham, NC 27707
[log in to unmask]
(336) 202-7341
"In our every deliberation we must consider the impact of our decisions on
the next seven generations."
From the Great Law of the Iroquois Confederacy.
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