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The Post Surgeon
Doctors hired by the U. S. Army in the 19th century were some
of the best trained physicians in the United States. The written examination
for army surgeons and assistant surgeons was rigorous and complex. Both surgeons
and assistant surgeons were commissioned officers. Acting assistant surgeons
(civilian contract physicians) were paid a monthly wage based on the terms
of their contracts.
Many surgeons who served at Fort Davis were veterans of the Civil War. William
Henry Gardner, post surgeon from 1882 to 1886, entered the War in 1861 as
a medical cadet. The following year he was promoted to assistant surgeon.
John Vance Lauderdale, who served at Fort Davis from 1888 to 1890, worked
on a hospital boat carrying the sick and wounded from battle to medical facilities
during the Civil War.
The duties of a post surgeon were numerous and sometimes overwhelming. In
addition to treating and caring for the sick and injured, he was responsible
for insuring that proper sanitary measures were endorsed and enforced. In
this capacity, he was involved in all aspects of garrison life.
Among the surgeon’s duties was the regular inspection of living areas, the
water supply, and cooking and sanitary facilities. To help ensure that the
garrison stayed healthy, he supervised bread baking at the post bakery, oversaw
the planting of a hospital garden, and strongly encouraged troops to have
vegetable gardens to supplement their rations.
The surgeon inspected the stables and corrals, functioned as the official
coroner, and frequently accompanied troops on campaigns and scouting details.
In the late 1880s, when Fort Davis received an ice machine "deemed essential
to the comfort and health" of the garrison, the post surgeon had responsibility
for its operation.
The post surgeon was encouraged to collect and send to the Army Medical
Museum in Washington, D. C., fauna and flora specimens as well as unusual
human skeletal parts. He kept weather statistics and spent hours completing
a multitude of reports and forms.
The Hospital Staff
Another duty of the surgeon was the supervision of those who assisted him
in running the hospital. At his right hand was the hospital steward who was
responsible for the day-to-day operation of the hospital. It was essential
that the steward have a good medical background since he mixed and administered
medications, checked on the condition of patients, and at times was called
upon to extract teeth.
Other members of the hospital staff included nurses, cooks and hospital
matrons. The nurses and cooks were enlisted men assigned to the hospital from
the companies present on post. The matrons, charged with washing the hospital
linens, were often wives and/or daughters of the hospital stewards. |