
In the reconstruction period, this hospital served the newly freed slaves as a Freedman's Bureau.

The Exchange Hotel became the Gordonsville Receiving Hospital which provided care for 70,000 soldiers, both Confederate and Union. Troops, supplies, and the wounded were transported on these railroads to Gordonsville. It was recognized and placed on the National Register of Historic Places on Augand acknowledged as an African-American Memorial Site in June of 2002.īefore the Civil War, the Exchange Hotel with its high ceiling parlors and grand veranda welcomed passengers from the two rail lines: the Virginia Central Railroad and the Alexandria Railroad. acquired and restored the property in 1971. On display are the original letters from the students to their teacher, court cases adjudicated in the building and other period items. The Museum displays of period furnishings and surgical artifacts remind the visitor of the eras when the building served as a Hotel and then as a Battlefield Receiving Hospital-the scene of untold agony and death, the building survived the conflict and is the only Receiving Hospital still standing in Virginia.ĭuring the reconstruction period, the Gordonsville Receiving Hospital served the newly freed slaves as a Freedman's Bureau. Among the many artifacts currently on display are surgical instruments used by Confederate medical staff, various pharmaceutical bottles and containers, medical knapsacks and panniers, stretchers and litters, prosthetic devices, and dental tools.

The Museum houses a world-renowned collection of artifacts relating to medical care during the Civil War. The Georgian architecture with its verandas and second-floor entry steps are reminiscent of Hotel days of a bygone era. Three floors of displays in an 1860 railroad hotel retakes visitors in time. The Civil War Medical Museum at the Exchange Hotel contains exhibitions on the history of Gordonsville as a railroad town, the elegance of the Exchange Hotel and its transformation and remarkable history as the Gordonsville Receiving Hospital with its medical and Civil War artifacts.
