During the 1840s, the practice of medicine on the frontier was primitive
and doctors were not normally available to treat sick or injured settlers.
The settlers usually had to depend upon themselves or their neighbors
for any assistance in a medical emergency. The soldiers who were stationed
at the forts on the frontier were more fortunate than the emigrants
and settlers because medical treatment was available from and dispensed
by the Post Surgeon.
In 1821, the Medical Department of the Army was reorganized and consisted
of one surgeon general, eight regimental surgeons and forty-five assistant
surgeons. An assistant surgeon was normally assigned to a small permanent
military installation (i.e. Fort Scott), and a surgeon was stationed
at Regimental Headquarters. Any person who desired an appointment as
a medical officer was required to apply to the Secretary of War, through
the Surgeon General, and to have a license to practice from a respectable
medical association or college. Before receiving an appointment a candidate
was also required to pass an examination which was conducted by a board
of three medical officers who were assigned by the Surgeon General.
The license and examination enabled the army to secure medical officers
who had a formal medical education that was supplemented with practical
experience. An assistant surgeon received fifty-two dollars per month
and was allowed one servant and the same allowance of fuel, quarters,
etc. as a captain. The Post Surgeon was authorized to treat civilian
patients and keep the fees which his private practice generated as a
supplement to his military income.
In addition to providing medical treatment to the sick, the Post Surgeon
was responsible for the operation of the hospital, examined recruits,
maintained the Meteorological Register, and furnished pension certificates.
The Meteorological Register was a book in which the daily weather information
(temperature, wind direction and force, amount of rain or snow, etc.)
was recorded. At small forts, the Post Surgeon's medical staff consisted
of at least one hospital steward and a cook who were both enlisted soldiers.
Some of the prevalent diseases at Fort Scott were malarial fevers,
respiratory infections, pneumonia, dysentery, alcoholism and venereal
disease. There were periodic epidemics of influenza and catarrh (the
common cold), but none of cholera. Cultivated and wild fruits, vegetables,
and herbs were traditionally used for their medicinal value by doctors
and settlers. Wild onions, celery and watercress were used to prevent
and cure scurvy (Vitamin C deficiency), which was common among
the settlers and soldiers on the frontier.
Medical knowledge and practices of the 1840s was very primitive compared
to that of the 20th century. Normally a soldier had to be very sick
or severely injured before he was admitted to the hospital. The inducement
of bleeding and the belief that an abundant flow of pus are two examples
of accepted 19th century medical procedures which were often fatal.
If a soldier survived an operation, his chances of recovery were minimal
because aseptic surgical techniques and equipment sterilization were
not developed until after the Civil War.
Soldiers in the hospital were given a daily ration of food that would
be supplied by the hospital. Under the regular system of supplying provisions
to the sick men in the hospital, the rations were paid for jointly by
the Subsistence and Medical Departments. Often the sick were unable
to eat their rations of bread and pork, and the commissary was unable
to furnish fowl, mutton, eggs, milk, and butter his diet required. These
were purchased from the hospital fund. A commissary was authorized,
on the requisition of a medical officer to buy the following from the
fund:
- Food, solid or fluid, to be used for the diet of the sick, and
not furnished by the Subsistence Department or Medical Department.
- Articles to be used in either the preparation or serving of the
food, embracing principally cooking utensils and table furniture,
and not furnished by the Quartermaster's Department or Medical Department.
- Gas, oil, and other means of illumination, to be used instead of
candles, which are part of the soldier's ration.
Barley, sage, chocolate, tea, wine, brandy, etc., which were in the
hospital stores and were intended for a six to twelve month's supply
frequently were exhausted in half the time.
Information from this section was taken from the
Historic Furnishing
Plan for The
Hospital at Fort Scott and an anonymous article on Frontier
Medicine.