Sanger then entered a controversial period in his life. August 6th, 1864, he was assigned to the Elmira, NY, prison camp (Fig.
3). He was in charge of the medical care of between 9000–10,000 Confederate prisoners in unsavory conditions (including scurvy).
According to Waggoner [
6], “Sanger demonstrated both concern about the sanitary condition of the camp and pride in the deaths of POWs as furthering
the overall war aims. His cruelty attracted some censure, but Sanger never faced disciplinary action.” According to another
report of the time, he was “a man who realized his own potential and self-wealth, and made every effort to see that others
realized it as well” [
1]. However, within weeks he had notified his superiors of the poor conditions and the interference by the military command
in his attempts to rectify them. According to Gray he repeatedly tried to be reassigned and wrote that he “…could not be held
responsible for a large medical department with over a 1000 patients without power, authority, or influence” [
2]. While his comments were sympathetically received by a Colonel Hoffman in Washington, he was told the conditions there were
the responsibility of the camp commander, with whom he clashed. Nonetheless, he was held by some to be responsible for high
death rates. Sanger was subsequently sent to Detroit and then to Nashville where he was Medical Director of the District of
East Tennessee. He left military service in September, 1865, and returned to Bangor where he developed a large surgical practice
and “hesitated at nothing in surgery” [
3]. He was appointed surgeon-general of Maine and became President of the Maine Medical Association in 1877. He wrote on a
number medical conditions, but had a particular interest in (one might say passion for) the problems of malpractice suits
[
4].
Fig. 3 The Civil War prison camp at Elmira, NY in 1864 is shown during roll-call.