The U.S. Civil War (1861-1865) pre-dated modern understanding of
malaria. Yet, malarial diseases (
remittent fever, intermittent
fever, typho-malarial
fever) were frequently reported as causes of morbidity and mortality in soldiers. Modern readers find Civil War-era descriptions of
malaria contradictory or paradoxical. For example, although the concept of race-specific immunity to tropical diseases was widely accepted,
malaria mortality rates were reportedly more than three times higher among Black than White Union soldiers (16/1,000/year versus 5/1,000/year). Also,
malaria rates were reportedly lower among prisoners of war at the infamous Andersonville, GA, prison camp than among Confederate soldiers in the same area. Literally tons of
quinine were given prophylactically to Union soldiers deployed in the southern United States, but
blackwater fever was not reported by medical officers. All three paradoxes have reasonable modern explanations that give credence to the astute clinical observations of our scientific predecessors during the U.S. Civil War.