Summary: | This historical project was developed under the
direction of Robert W. Fogel with data collected on the veterans of the
Union Army in the period 1820-1940 by the Department of Economics at
Brigham Young University and processed by the Center for Population
Economics at the University of Chicago. The project was sponsored by the
National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation. The
goal of the project was to construct datasets suitable for longitudinal
analyses of factors affecting the aging process. Lifetime military,
medical, and socioeconomic data linked to other historical documents
on a sample of white males mustered into the Union Army during the
Civil War are used to: examine the influence of environmental and host
factors prior to recruitment on the health performance and survival of
recruits during military service, identify and show relationships
between socioeconomic and biomedical conditions (including nutritional
status) of veterans at early ages and mortality rates from diseases at
middle and late ages, and study the effects of health and pensions on
labor force participation rates of veterans at ages 65 and over. There
are three principal datasets in this project. The largest, the "Military,
Pension, and Medical Records," collected from military-related documents
at the National Archives in Washington, DC, include both war-time records
and applications made by veterans for pension support, and related
detailed physical examinations completed by physicians, certifying the
veterans' health and disability status. Information from these
examinations was collected in the second major dataset, the "Surgeon's
Certificates." The third major dataset, the "Census Records," contains
information that is available in the U.S. Federal Censuses of 1850, 1860,
1900, and 1910, though not all veterans could be successfully linked to
the Census documents. However, all individuals in the series can be
linked across datasets by means of a unique identification
number. |
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