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Autobiography
of Silas Thompson Trowbridge M.D. New Introduction by John S. Haller Jr. and
Barbara Mason
September 2004 paper,
0-8093-2591-8, $30.00 304
pages, 4 1/2 x 6 1/2 American History / Illinois / Civil War / Autobiography
A Shawnee Classic
Autobiography of Silas Thompson Trowbridge M.D.
is a remarkable account of nineteenth-century medicine, politics, and
personal life that recovers the captivating experiences of a Civil
War–era regimental surgeon who was also a president of the Illinois
State Medical Society and a United States consul in Mexico. First
published in 1872 by Trowbridge’s family and even printed on a
family-owned press, only a handful of copies of the initial publication
survive. In this first paperback edition, Trowbridge’s memoirs are
reprinted as they originally appeared.
Indiana-born
Trowbridge moved to Illinois in his early twenties. A teacher by trade, he
continued that career while he began the study of medicine, eventually
starting a medical practice near New Castle, which he later moved to
Decatur. Though respected by the community, Trowbridge lacked an authentic
medical degree, so he enrolled in a four-month course of medical lectures
at Rush Medical College in Chicago. Autobiography describes the
atmosphere of the medical school and delineates Trowbridge’s opinions on
the lack of quality control in medical colleges of the day.
Although
three years of study and two annual terms of sixteen weeks were the actual
requirements for the degree, Trowbridge was allowed to graduate after a
single course of lectures and
completion of a twenty-page thesis due to his previous experience. He then
married a young widow and returned to Decatur, where he began a
partnership with two local physicians and inaugurated a county medical
society. In addition to practicing medicine, he was known and
respected for regulating it, too, having supported legislation that would
legalize dissection and prohibit incompetent persons from practicing
medicine. In 1861, Trowbridge began service as a surgeon of the 8th Illinois Volunteer Infantry commanded by Colonel Richard J. Oglesby.
Autobiography
describes his experiences beginning in Cairo, Illinois, where the
infantry was involved in several expeditions and where Trowbridge made his
“debut at the operating table.” Revealing a litany of surgical duties,
replete with gruesome details, these war-time recollections provide a
unique perspective on medical practices of the day. Likewise, his
commentaries on political issues and his descriptions of combat serve to
correct some of the early written histories of the war’s great battles.
After
receiving an honorable discharge in 1864, Trowbridge returned to Decatur
to resume his partnership with Dr. W. J. Chenoweth and devote himself to
surgery. His reminiscences recount several difficult surgeries, his
efforts to reorganize the county medical society (which had collapsed
during the war), and his communications to the Illinois legislature to set
higher qualifications for practicing physicians. He was later elected
president of the Illinois State Medical Society and appointed by President
Grant United States Consul to Vera Cruz on the eastern coast of Mexico,
where he studied and challenged the treatment of yellow fever. The
autobiography ends in 1874 with a six-day family vacation and the marriage
of his daughter to a merchant of Vera Cruz.
“Readers will find pleasure in reading Autobiography of Silas Thompson Trowbridge M.D. The author provides a fascinating look at the practice of medicine as well as the obvious interplay of medicine and politics in the years before, during, and after the Civil War.”—John S. Haller Jr. and Barbara Mason, from the Introduction
John S. Haller is a professor of history at Southern Illinois
University Carbondale. He is the author of numerous books, including Medical
Protestants: The Eclectics in American Medicine, 1825–1939, Farmcarts to
Fords: A History of the Military Ambulance, 1790–1925, and The
People’s Doctors: Samuel Thomson and the American Botanical Movement,
1790–1860. Barbara Mason is the curator of the Pearson Museum at the
Southern Illinois University School of Medicine in Springfield, Illinois,
where she is also a member of the Department of Medical Humanities. She is
the coauthor, with Emmet F. Pearson, of My Sixty Years of Medicine and
The Emmet F. Pearson Collection of Disinfected Mail and, with John
S. Haller, of Forging a Medical Practice, 1884–1938: An Illinois Case
Study.
Available through booksellers everywhere or directly from Southern Illinois University Press
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