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EARLY
SOUTHEAST
TEXAS "DOCS"
WERE MEDICAL
MEN OF IRON
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
ENTERPRISE-JOURNAL,
November 9,
1980
No
stretch of the
Lone Star
State bears a
history more
exciting or
romantic than
does that
region of
about ten
counties
comprising
extreme
Southeast
Texas. Yet the
story of its
frontier
saddlebag
physicians
remains
largely
unrecorded and
unheralded to
the present
day. Only
recently, the
writer learned
from the
office of the
Jefferson
County Medical
Society that
that
association
maintains no
biographical
sketches of
its deceased
former
members.
Although
many frontier
doctors were
armed with the
best medical
knowledge that
was available
in their day
and age, their
medical
practices were
extremely
limited by the
sparseness of
population,
primitive and
slow
transportation,
and a frontier
overproductive
of epidemics
and violence.
Hence, it is
no wonder that
the time
required to
visit a rural
patient and
return might
consume 24
hours. Too,
medicine alone
would rarely
support a
physician in
that frontier
era, and most
of them had to
combine
medical
practice with
merchandising,
land
speculation,
or some other
resource,
usually
farming, in
order to
survive, and
some even gave
up medicine
entirely.
The
earliest
saddlebag
'doc' was John
A. Veatch of
Jasper County,
who held two
Mexican land
grants, one at
Sour Lake and
another at
Spindletop. He
had just
completed the
survey of the
McGaffey
league at
Sabine Pass
when the Texas
Revolution
broke out, and
in November,
1835, he
hurried to San
Antonio de
Bexar to fight
in the
retaking of
that city by
Col. Ben
Milam.
Chemist,
surveyor,
botanist, and
teacher, Dr.
Veatch went to
California
during the
gold rush of
1849, later
discovering
the massive
borax deposits
there in the
Mojave Desert.
In 1870, he
was appointed
to occupy the
chair of
chemistry at
Williamette
University in
Oregon, where
he also died.
Dr.
S. H. Everett
of Jasper
County was a
medical
graduate from
New York City,
but he later
abandoned his
profession in
Texas. He
signed the
Texas
Declaration of
Independence
and served two
terms as
president pro
tempore of the
Texas Senate.
Otherwise, he
was a land
speculator,
mail
contractor,
and cotton
exporter at
Sabine Pass
until his
death of
yellow fever
at New Orleans
in 1845.
Beaumont's
earliest
resident
physician was
Dr. D. J. O.
Millard, a
brother of the
town's
founder. From
1839 until his
death in 1854,
he combined
merchandising
with his drug
store and
medical
practice,
operating
Beaumont's
first store in
partnership
with another
of the town's
founders and
also a
druggist,
Joseph P.
Pulsifer.
Millard also
served as
Jefferson
County's third
chief justice
(county judge)
and as county
treasurer.
Another
early
Beaumonter,
Dr. F. W.
Ogden was
college-trained
in both
medicine and
law, but he
practiced only
the legal
profession
after his
arrival in
Beaumont in
1839. He was
the first
district
attorney for
the Fifth
Judicial
District,
served in the
7th and 8th
Congresses of
the Texas
Republic, and
died at
Beaumont in
1859.
Dr.
Niles F.
Smith, the
first
practitioner
of the healing
art in Sabine
Pass, arrived
there in 1839.
A lifelong
friend of Gen.
Sam Houston,
he served as
an engineer in
the Texas
army, and in
Dec., 1836,
was appointed
by Houston as
the first bank
examiner for
the republic.
Educated
in New York,
Smith
practiced
medicine at
Sabine Pass
until his
death there in
1858, but his
principal
support came
from land
speculation,
cotton-exporting,
and
merchandising.
He was also a
founding
proprietor of
Sam Houston's
Sabine City
Company,
serving until
his death as
its local
agent. In 1847
he became a
partner for a
short time
with John
H.Hutchings
and John
Sealy, later
of Galveston,
in a cotton
export firm at
Sabine Pass.
In
the 1850
census, Dr.
Joseph C.
Danforth is
listed as
Beaumont's
only
physician, Dr.
Millard always
styling
himself in the
census as a
druggist.
Danforth seems
to have earned
his livelihood
principally
from his
practice,
having styled
himself in the
census as a
physician, but
he was also
extensively
engaged in
agriculture on
his 225-acre
farm near
Beaumont. He
lived there
about ten
years, but his
ultimate place
of residence,
death, or fate
as a physician
are unknown.
Educated
in Vermont,
Dr. George W.
Hawley was
another who
combined
practice with
real estate,
cotton-shipping,
and
merchandising,
and became
wealthy in the
process. In
1847, he and
his family
left
Galveston,
where they
owned
considerable
property, and
resettled at
Sabine Pass,
where he soon
bought out Dr.
Smith's
"grocery and
ten pin
alley." In
1854, he
bought 150
lots in the
Beaumont
Townsite
Company and
began practice
there. By
1860, his and
his wife's
assets
amounted to
$86,500, the
third largest
in Jefferson
County. In the
1860 census,
Mrs. Hawley
was living
with her
children in
Sabine Pass,
apparently to
manage their
interests
there and in
Galveston.
True
to his
Hippocratic
oath, he and
his wife died
of yellow
fever while
nursing
patients
during
Beaumont's
yellow fever
epidemic of
October, 1862,
and both were
buried in a
cemetery that
once stood on
the site of
the now
demolished
First
Methodist
Church on
Pearl Street.
According
to an old
account, Dr.
and Mrs.
Sylvester
Mansfield were
two others who
selflessly
gave their
lives while
nursing
patients there
at the same
time. but a
descendent of
them later
informed the
writer that
only the wife
died in
Beaumont, the
physician and
his young
children later
returning to
their former
home in
Mississippi.
Mansfield
arrived in
Beaumont in
1857, and soon
acquired a
half-interest
in the
"Stephen R.
Marble," which
was the first
steamboat ever
built at
Beaumont. Mrs.
Mansfield was
also buried in
the old
cemetery on
Pearl Street.
She was a
sister to Mrs.
Luanza Calder,
one of the
pioneer
residents of
the city.
The
1860 census
listed six
doctors at
Beaumont,
although the
period of
residences of
three were
temporary, one
soon died, and
a fifth moved
away. Drs.
Charles and
William H.
Baldwin,
respectively,
father and
son, were
educated in
Virginia, but
neither
remained in
Beaumont for
long. Baldwin,
Sr., was the
father of two
of Beaumont's
early matrons,
Mrs. Jeff
Chaison and
Mrs. J. R.
Alexander, and
after the
Civil War, he
returned to
Virginia.
Dr.
W. H. Baldwin
bought out Dr.
P. H. Glaze's
drug store in
1862, and
except for a
period of
service in the
Confederate
army, remained
in Beaumont
until after
1870, when he
moved to
Dallas and
founded a
wholesale drug
company which
is still in
business
there.
Still
a third Dr.
Baldwin was in
practice in
Beaumont in
1880, but his
period of
residence
there was
apparently
short, and
apparently no
connection
existed
between him
and the other
Baldwins.
According to
the 1880
census, Dr.
Fred H.
Baldwin was a
59-year-old
native of New
York, but
nothing else
is known about
him.
Dr.
David Scott
was the
company
physician of
the Texas and
New Orleans
Railroad at
Beaumont in
1859, and kept
his office on
the
company-owned
steamboat, the
220-foot,
2,500 bale
"Florilda."
The
sternwheeler,
however, never
engaged in
cotton-carrying
in Texas and
later sank at
Orange during
the hurricane
of Sept. 13,
1865. Scott
left Beaumont
at the
outbreak of
the Civil War.
The
length of stay
of Beaumont's
other Civil
War era
doctors was
equally short,
perhaps
because of the
exigencies of
war. The
sixth, Dr. N.
G. Haltom,
married Nora
Lee Pipkin,
Beaumont's
postmistress
of 1865, and
he soon
entered the
saw and
shingle mill
business with
his
father-in-law,
the Rev.John
F. Pipkin.
Haltom died
young, and
since he is
not listed in
Beaumont's
1870 census,
he was
apparently
already dead
or moved away.
The Pipkin and
Haltom sawmill
burned in
1873.
The
stories of
Jefferson
County's
Confederate
physicians,
Drs. George H.
Bailey, J. D.
Murray, E. A.
Pye, and --
Gordon, would
fill a book,
and to
conserve
space, the
writer must be
more concise
than he would
prefer to be.
Only Dr.
Murray was in
private
practice in
Sabine Pass.
For the first
years after
Dr. Smith's
death, the
seaport city
had no
resident
physician
until the
young
Scotsman,
Murray,
arrived in
1859. His was
a most unusual
practice for
after joining
artillery Co.
B of Spaight's
Battalion, he
maintained his
civilian
responsibilities
in addition to
his military
duties as a
Confederate
assistant
surgeon.
It
being his
first
experience
with yellow
fever, Dr.
Murray failed
to diagnose
the 1862
epidemic
correctly when
it arrived,
but otherwise
his
performance,
while
afflicted with
the disease
himself (among
200 patients,
100 of whom
died), was
nothing short
of angelic.
In
April, 1863,
following the
skirmish at
Sabine
Lighthouse,
Murray
struggled for
12 hours to
save the life
of Union Comm.
A. H.
McDermot, one
of the
blockade
captains, but
failed. On the
date of the
battle of
Sabine Pass,
Sept. 8, 1863,
Dr. Murray,
who was
already
discharged
from the
Confederate
army, rode
through Union
shellfire
while tending
an ambulatory
patient in
Fort Griffin.
In order to
protect his
life, Murray
put his
patient behind
him on his
horse and
carried him to
the
Confederate
hospital in
Sabine. After
the war,
Murray
remained in
Sabine as
physician and
druggist until
his death in
1874. Murray
had succored
the wounded of
four battles
at Sabine
Pass, and at
the time of
his death,
left little to
show for his
life's work
except a
$1,000
inventory of
drugs and that
perpetual
enigma of
physicians, a
drawer filled
with
uncollected
medical bills.
Dr.
Bailey,
although
nominally the
surgeon of
Sabine's
Confederate
hospital,
volunteered
and commanded
two of Lt.
Dick Dowling's
six cannons at
the Battle of
Sabine Pass.
Afterward, he
and Murray
labored 72
hours,
reputedly
without sleep,
to succor the
wounds that
Dr. Bailey had
helped to
inflict. He
too dressed
the wounds of
four Sabine
battles
(including 11
capital
operations
after the
Battle of
Calcasieu
Pass, La., on
May 6, 1864),
and he was the
last survivor
of Fort
Griffin's
immortalized
defenders when
he died in
California in
1907.
The
wartime life
of Surgeon E.
A. Pye,
commandant of
Beaumont's
Confederate
Hospital in
the
courthouse,
was less
exciting, but
his surviving
letters,
published in
"Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly,"
are virtually
the only
source of
Beaumont's
history for
the years
1864-1865.
Like Dr. and
Mrs. Hawley,
Pye and his
wife bravely
sacrificed
their lives
nursing
victims of the
great yellow
fever epidemic
at Calvert,
Texas, in
1873. Dr. Pye
was then
living in
Brenham, but
in response to
a plea for
aid, they
labored at
Calvert until
both were too
afflicted with
yellow fever
to stand up.
Indeed,
"greater love
hath no man
etc." applies
to that
courageous
couple as
well.
Educated
in
Philadelphia,
Dr. William
Hewson became
Orange's first
physician upon
his arrival
there in 1850.
He maintained
a store as
well as his
medical
practice until
his death in
1867. His wife
Mary became
Orange's first
public school
teacher in
1851. For 15
years, until
his last
illness, Dr.
Hewson taught
a Sunday
School class
of 75 scholars
long before
any regular
church
services,
church
buildings, or
congregations
existed at
Orange. His
son, Dr. David
C. Hewson,
continued the
family medical
practice and
drug store in
Orange until
his own death
in 1894.
Another
early Sabine
physician was
Dr. W. W.
Bennett, who
was in
practice with
Murray in
1874, but
nothing else
is known about
him. Dr. A. B.
Chamberlain, a
medical
graduate of
the University
of Tennessee,
began practice
in Sabine in
1872 and
continued as
public health
and
immigration
officer until
1882, when he
moved to
Galveston. He
was quarantine
officer for
six years, and
between 1893
and 1908, he
served
continuously
as either
grand
inspector
general or
secretary
general of the
Supreme
Council of
Scottish Rite
Masonry of
Texas.
A
graduate of
the School of
Medicine of
New Orleans,
Dr. A. N.
Perkins, the
grandfather of
Lamar
University's
longtime (now
deceased)
librarian
Julia Plummer,
was another of
Sabine's early
doctors, whose
practice in
East Texas
spanned 50
years. He
began at
Jasper in
1851, moved to
Sabine in
1872, to
Beaumont in
1880, and back
to Sabine in
1883, where he
was quarantine
officer for
the next ten
years. His
private
practice there
continued
until after
1900.
Also
a New Orleans
graduate, Dr.
J. P. Haynes
was another
East Texan
whose practice
spanned more
than a half
century. He
began as a
partner of Dr.
Perkins in
Jasper and
spent most of
his early
years there.
He acquired a
sizeable
estate of real
property in
Jasper and
Sabine Pass.
He practiced a
few years in
Sabine Pass,
and in 1900 he
was still in
private
practice in
Beaumont. The
writer does
not know the
year of his
retirement or
death.
A
graduate of
the University
of
Pennsylvania
Medical
School, Dr.
Silas B.
Turner settled
in Hardin
County in
1860. He
served four
years in the
Confederate
Army, and
except for two
years in
private
practice in
Beaumont,
1870-1872,
lived out his
life at
Hardin, Hardin
County, until
1881 and
thereafter at
Kountze until
his death in
1892. At the
time of his
death, he was
a partner in
the Turner and
Hooks sawmill
at Sharon,
Hardin County.
Another
pioneer
Kountze
physician, Dr.
John W. Cruse,
received his
degree from
the Vanderbilt
School of
Medicine.
Dr.
W. T. Simmons
began his
medical career
in Beaumont in
1866, and
court house
records verify
that he also
practiced at
Sabine Pass.
In March,
1873, he
married Mary
Long, the
daughter of
pioneer
sawmiller,
Davis Long.
Apparently
both of them
died quite
young, and
both are
buried in the
now extinct
Jirou Cemetery
at the
Oakland-Gladys
Street area of
Beaumont.
Dr.
Obadiah M.
Kyle was
another young
Beaumonter
whose
promising
medical career
was
interrupted by
death in
April, 1879. A
graduate of
New Orleans
Medical
College, he
arrived in the
"sawdust city"
in 1871, where
in Nov., 1872,
he married
Helen Herring,
the daughter
of a prominent
local family.
In 1872, he
became a
partner in the
firm of
Vaughan and
Kyle, a
cotton-shipping
brokerage at
Sabine Pass.
During the
1870s, in
conjunction
with William
and W. P. H.
McFaddin, and
William and
Valentine
Wiess, he
organized the
Beaumont
Pasture
Company, a
60,000-acre
Jefferson
County ranch
stocking
10,000 cattle
in
Mid-Jefferson
County, and it
was upon land
owned and
controlled by
these partners
that the famed
Lucas gusher
was bored
successfully
in Jan., 1901.
Volume
I of the
Beaumont
"Enterprise"
indicates that
medical
advertisements
were an
ethical
procedure in
1880-1881. One
such ad
discloses that
a Dr. J. A.
Gilder was a
Beaumont
physician and
surgeon who
maintained
offices in W.
M. Kyle's drug
store. In a
health
officer's
report of
Beaumont's
small pox
epidemic of
May-June,
1883, Dr.
Powhattan
Jordan
reported that
he had burned
the bedding,
clothing, and
other personal
effects of Dr.
Gilder and his
family,
strongly
implying that
they had died.
Indeed, they
most probably
had been
plague-victims
who had
hastily been
isolated in a
pest house
built at
Spindletop in
June, 1883.
Whether Gilder
and his family
died is not
mentioned in
any surviving
account, but
he no longer
practiced in
Beaumont after
June, 1883,
nor was he
mentioned in
any further
news accounts.
Among
other ads of
1880 were
those of Drs.
Woodson A.
Tyree and C.
Y. Thompson,
each of whom
maintained
offices in Dr.
J. J. L.
Gilliland's
drug store. A
native of West
Virginia, Dr.
Tyree brought
his family to
Beaumont in
1878. In 1881
he and Dr.
Zachary T.
Fuller were
appointed to
the Board of
Medical
Examiners for
the First
Judicial
District of
East Texas.
But the
following
October, the
"Enterprise"
reported that
Dr. Tyree had
chosen to
resume his
former
practice in
Virginia and
observed of
him: "Beaumont
will lose a
good
physician, and
good citizen,
and a good man
all around."
Dr.
Thompson
settled in the
"sawdust city"
in 1879, and
in Jan., 1886,
was one of
three
phsicians who
attended the
hanging of
Bill Madison
in Beaumont.
In 1892, he
was vice
president of
the Southeast
Texas Medical
Society. His
length of
residence and
ultimate fate
as a physician
are also
unknown.
The
forerunner of
the present
Orange and
Jefferson
County Medical
societies, the
old Southeast
Texas Medical
Society had
its "ups and
downs" during
the last
century, and
organized and
disbanded two
or three
times. Its
primary
function was
to name the
Board of
Medical
Examiners in a
district
comprised of
six counties,
certify new
incoming
physicians who
were just
beginning
practice, and
set standards
of ethics and
fees for
physicians. At
a Jasper
meeting of
May, 1881, the
board
consisted of
Drs. F. C.
Ford and Stone
of Jasper; Dr.
McWhorter of
Newton; Dr.
Chapman of
Woodville;
Drs. S. W.
Sholars and D.
C. Hewson of
Orange; and
Drs. Zach. T.
Fuller and W.
A. Tyree of
Beaumont.
In
March, 1892,
the board
consisted of
Drs. Sholars
and J. C.
Seastrunk of
Orange; J. B.
Roberts of
Woodville; and
Drs. B. F.
Calhoun and J.
S. Price of
Beaumont.
During the
annual
election of
that year, the
following were
elected
officers of
the society
for 1892, as
follows: Drs.
Perkins of
Sabine,
president;
Thompson and
Sholars, vice
presidents;
and F. Hydra
of Orange,
sec.-treasurer.
In addition,
Drs. Calhoun
of Beaumont,
J. Saunders of
Orange, and
Roberts of
Woodville were
chosen as the
society's
censors. The
board also
"acted on the
application"
of Dr. T. E.
Stone of
Beaumont and
certified him
for practice.
Other
Society
members of
that year
included Drs.
W.J. Blewett
of Beaumont,
J. W. Cruse of
Kountze, T. R.
Ogden and W.
R. Callen. At
the July,
1892,
quarterly
meeting, Drs.
Roberts,
Price, and
Saunders
delivered
papers on the
diseases of
"Hermaturia
Miasmatic,"
"La Grippe,"
and "Typhoid
Fever."
Little
can be added
about the
early
physicians of
Orange from
the writer's
records,
except that
Dr. James
Saunders
became the
first mayor of
the city in
1886. Drs. S.
M. Brown and
his son, E. W.
Brown, Sr.,
were also in
practice there
between 1880
and 1900, the
latter
marrying one
of the young
Orange belles
of that
period, Miss
Carrie
Lutcher.
According to
family
traditions,
Dr. S. M.
Brown was
killed by a
locomotive on
March 1, 1887,
while
attempting to
save another
person's life
at a railway
crossing.
A
graduate of
Mobile Medical
College, Dr.
Zachary T.
Fuller was one
of Beaumont's
better-known
physicians,
practicing
there from
1875 until his
death of
malaria on
Nov. 2, 1890.
He served
often as a
school board
member. He
left a young
wife, the
former Mary
Gilbert, and
four small
children as
survivors.
Dr.
Powhattan
Jordan had
practiced
elsewhere in
Texas and in
the
Confederate
and Guatemalan
armies before
he arrived in
Beaumont in
1871. A
graduate of
Columbia
College of
Medicine,
Jordan soon
married a
daughter of
Mrs. Kate
Dorman, the
Confederate
heroine of
Sabine Pass.
In 1882,
Jordan was
appointed
health officer
and was active
in ridding
Beaumont of
all health
hazards during
the small pox
epidemic of
1883.
About
1885, he left
Beaumont for a
few years, but
he returned
about 1889 and
resumed his
former
practice. Dr.
Jordan
attained an
enviable
reputation as
an anatomist,
a contributor
to medical
journals, and
as an
innovator in
new surgical
techniques and
devices.
In
1863, Dr. B.
F. Calhoun was
a 15-year-old
enlistee in
the
Confederate
Army. He
enrolled in
the Galveston
Medical
College in
1875 and came
to Beaumont in
1882. In 1886
he was elected
mayor, but
resigned the
following
year. He was
Beaumont's
health officer
from 1898 to
1904.
Other
physicians
began practice
in Beaumont
during the
1890s, but
space will not
permit any
lengthy
elaboration
about their
lives, since
they could
hardly be
defined as
"frontier
saddlebag
physicians."
In 1899, six
doctors
organized the
Jefferson
County Medical
Society. Dr.
J. S. Price
came in 1891,
and in 1901
was a charter
member of
Hotel Dieu's
staff. Dr. W.
W. Cunningham
also began
practice in
1891, but soon
resettled in
Houston for a
few years
before moving
back to
Beaumont. He,
too, was a
charter member
of Hotel
Dieu's staff.
Other staff
members of
1901 included
Drs. Blewett,
H. A. Barr,
C.A. Cobb, L.
Goldstein, J.
D. Gober, J.
M. Gober, T.
H. Frey, B. F.
Cunningham,
and others.
The
area's first
hospital was
Sacred Heart,
founded in
March, 1891,
in Orange, and
administered
by the Sisters
of Charity of
Galveston. In
February,
1892, it was
deactivated,
having nursed
only 70
patients in
its eleven
months of
existence. It
is evident to
the writer
that religious
prejudices
contributed to
its demise,
and many years
would pass
before the
Frances A.
Lutcher
Memorial
Hospital was
completed in
Orange.
In
1897,
Beaumont's
Hotel Dieu was
begun under
the pastorate
of Fr. M. P.
McSorley, but
was completed,
at a cost of
$25,000, after
the arrival of
Rev. Fr.
William Lee.
The initial
three-story,
frame building
had wards and
private rooms
to accommodate
55 patients,
and an
operating room
on the second
floor, all
administered
by the same
religious
order of
sisters from
Galveston. By
1900, it had
already cared
for 750
patients,
including some
small pox
victims, "with
very few
fatalities."
Dr. H. A. Barr
was its first
resident
surgeon-physician.
In
brief, this is
the story of
some of
Southeast
Texas'
earliest
saddlebag
physicians and
medical
facilities. By
the standards
of today,
their medical
knowledge and
treatment
would probably
be considered
primitive and
crude at best,
but one must
recall the
great strides
of advancement
made every
year in the
medical
profession.
Some early
doctors had no
formal
training at
all, except
that served as
an apprentice
to an older
physician. Too
often, too
many myths and
legends have
entwined
themselves
around the
country,
"saddlebag
docs," whereas
an objective
account of
their lives
would most
likely serve a
better
purpose. Like
their
modern-day
counterparts,
they were
medical men of
iron, but they
performed
their errands
of mercy at a
time when
transportation
was
snail-paced,
medical
knowledge and
medicines were
primitive, and
life in
Southeast
Texas was
harsh and
violent.
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