Free Workshop for Virginia and North Carolina Teachers, Danville Museum of Fine Arts & History
Danville, Virginia November 5, 2022
A packed room of Virginia and North Carolina teachers convened at the Danville (Virginia) Museum of Fine Arts and History for a day-long workshop highlighting the Institute’s collections relative to the Revolutionary War in the South and the crossing of the Dan River, eighteenth century medical practice, and the Revolution’s southern heroines. In addition to Rachel Nellis and Stacia Smith from our staff, this engaging program featured Dr. John Gordon from the Command and Staff College, Marine Corps University, Barbara Bass, President of the Halifax County (North Carolina) Historical Society, and Tina Cornely, Director of the Danville Museum. This event was generously funded by the Society of the Cincinnati in the State of Virginia and the North Carolina Society of the Cincinnati.
Click for a larger view.
Military Collections and Remarks
Robert Donkin
New-York: Printed by H. Gaine, 1777
The Society of the Cincinnati, The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
Throughout the war Americans harbored fears that the enemy was deliberately causing the spread of smallpox through the military and civilian population. Although it is difficult to prove specific cases of such biological warfare, there is fascinating evidence in this book by a British military officer, published in New York in 1777. In his chapter on “Bows,” Robert Donkin added a footnote: “Dip arrows in matter of small pox, and twang them at the American rebels, in order to inoculate them; this would sooner disband these stubborn, ignorant, enthusiastic savages, than any other compulsive measures. Such is their dread and fear of that disorder!” The audaciousness of Donkin’s suggestion did not go unnoticed, and the passage has been excised in nearly every known copy of his book.
Click for a larger view.
The Diseases Incident to Armies, with the Method of Cure
Gerard, Freiherr van Swieten
Philadelphia: Printed and sold, by R. Bell, 1776
The Society of the Cincinnati, The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
As the war began, American publishers sought out medical texts to meet the needs of the new army’s medical corps. This translation of the work of a prominent Dutch military physician was published in Philadelphia in 1776. The manual also included excerpts from the works of two British authors—John Ranby on the nature and treatment of gunshot wounds and William Northcote on the prevention of scurvy at sea.
Click for a larger view.
Lancet owned by Justus Storrs
Made by Benjamin Hanks, Mansfield, Conn.
1774
The Society of the Cincinnati, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Justus Craft, Society of the Cincinnati in the State of Connecticut, 1965
Military physicians used lancets to draw out blood, score the skin for inoculation, and drain infections. This brass and iron example, inscribed with the name of its maker, Benjamin Hanks, belonged to Justus Storrs, a surgeon’s mate in the Connecticut Continental Line.
Click for a larger view.
Pharmacopoeia simpliciorum et efficaciorum
William Brown
Philadelphiae: Ex officina Styner & Cist, 1778
The Society of the Cincinnati, The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
William Brown, physician general of the Middle Department of the Continental Army, compiled this handbook of formulas for medicinal preparations while stationed at Lititz, Pennsylvania, in 1778. Known as the “Lititz Pharmacopoeia,” it set the standard for the military hospitals across the states. Acknowledging the chronic shortages of medicines, the author emphasized “such formulae as it is always in our power to obtain.”
Click for a larger view.
Mortar and pestle owned by William Chowning
18th century
The Society of the Cincinnati, Gift of William J. Chewning, Jr., Society of the Cincinnati in the State of Virginia, 1959
This ceramic and wood mortar and pestle used in the preparation of medicines belonged to William Chowning, a surgeon’s mate in the Virginia State Navy.
Click for a larger view.
Plain Concise Practical Remarks on the Treatment of Wounds and Fractures
John Jones
New-York: Printed by John Holt, 1775
The Society of the Cincinnati, The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
Dr. John Jones, a professor of surgery at King’s College in New York, was a veteran of the French and Indian War. Recognizing the inexperience of the new recruits to the medical corps, he published this manual “for the Use of young Military Surgeons in North-America” in New York in 1775. A second expanded edition, which included advice for naval surgeons, was published in Philadelphia the following year. This copy belonged to Dr. Henry Latimer, who directed the Continental Army’s “Flying Hospital,” a mobile surgical unit.
Click for a larger view.
A Treatise, or Reflections, Drawn from Practice on Gun-shot Wounds
Henry-François Le Dran
London: Printed for John Clarke, 1743
The Society of the Cincinnati, The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
Early in his career, Dr. John Jones studied in Paris under Henry-François Le Dran, one of France’s leading military surgeons. Le Dran was a proponent of the Petit tourniquet as standard equipment for treating massive wounds and amputation. This English translation of Le Dran’s Traité ou Reflexions Tirées de la Pratique sur les Playes d'Armes à Feu bears the signature of Charles McKnight, who served as surgeon-general of hospitals in the Middle Department.
Click for a larger view.
Barnabas Binney (1751-1787)
Artist unknown, possibly William Verstille
ca. 1779-1783
The Society of the Cincinnati, Gift of Emily V. Binney, 1955
Barnabas Binney left his native Boston in 1774 to study medicine at the College of Philadelphia. In May 1776, shortly after earning his degree, he was commissioned a surgeon in the Hospital Department of the Continental Army. Dr. Binney spent more than seven years treating sick and wounded American soldiers. This watercolor portrait miniature painted during the war—possibly for Binney’s wife, Mary—depicts him in the uniform worn by Continental Army surgeons.
Click for a larger view.
Register of patients admitted to a Continental Army hospital
September 16, 1778-early January 1779
The Society of the Cincinnati, The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
Continental Army physicians relied on registers like this to account for and monitor patients under their care. This register lists patients according to their individual regiments and conveys important information pertaining to soldiers’ illnesses or injuries, with the malady crossed off when the patient was discharged. The inclusion of a column for “Deserted” along with “Fit for Duty” or “Died” is a telling indicator of the connection between health and morale within the army.
Click for a larger view.
David Olyphant (1720-1805)
By Samuel F. B. Morse (1791-1872)
ca. 1818-1821
The Society of the Cincinnati, Gift of Murray Olyphant, Jr., New York State Society of the Cincinnati, 1985
A graduate of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, David Olyphant came to America following the Battle of Culloden (1746) and settled in South Carolina. From the early years of the Revolutionary War, he directed a general hospital in the Charleston area. He was appointed director general of hospitals in South Carolina in May 1781, and shortly thereafter he and his hospital staff were taken prisoner by the British during the Siege of Charleston. Following his release, Olyphant administered a hospital for American prisoners still held in Charleston. After the war, he moved to Newport, Rhode Island, where he continued to practice medicine. Dr. Olyphant’s son, David Washington Cincinnatus Olyphant, commissioned this posthumous oil portrait from American artist and inventor Samuel F. B. Morse.
Click for a larger view.
Nathan Dorsey (1754-1806)
By Charles Willson Peale (1741-1827)
ca. 1775
On loan from the Corinne Dorsey Onnen Trust
Nathan Dorsey served as a naval surgeon from 1776 until the end of the war. After his ship Raleigh endured several hours of cannon fire in 1778, he and fellow surgeons performed hours of amputations and wound dressing in the cramped, dark quarters. Later, as a prisoner on HMS Jersey, Dr. Dorsey tended to his fellow captives and was allowed to travel by boat to the hospital ship and to New York for medicine. Dr. Dorsey was the last surgeon to tend to a mortally wounded man in the war. This watercolor portrait miniature by Charles Willson Peale depicts Dr. Dorsey at about age twenty-one, shortly before he entered service in the Continental Navy.
Click for a larger view.
Directions for Preserving the Health of Soldiers: Recommended to the Consideration of the Officers of the Army of the United States
Benjamin Rush
Lancaster, Pa.: Printed by John Dunlap, 1778
The Society of the Cincinnati, The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
Benjamin Rush’s essay emphasizing the importance of diet, dress, and camp hygiene to the maintenance of soldiers’ health was first published in the Pennsylvania Packet in September 1777. At the urging of Gen. Nathanael Greene, it was republished the following year in pamphlet form by John Dunlap, who had followed Congress to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, during the British occupation of Philadelphia. The Board of War ordered four thousand copies to be distributed to the officers of the army.
Click for a larger view.
Orderly book of the Sixth Pennsylvania Regiment
Kept by Capt. Jacob Bowers
January 1-April 27, 1779
The Society of the Cincinnati, The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
This regimental order of January 13, 1779, directs the appointment of a subaltern officer, whose “particular duty will be to visit the Huts regularly twice a Day, see that the Camp is kept Clean and free from filth; in short all matter relative to preserving good order, Cleanliness and decency are strictly observed, as he will be accountable for the least Neglect of this order.”
Click for a larger view.
Gymnastique Médicinale et Chirurgicale
Clément Joseph Tissot
A Paris: Chez Bastien, Libraire, 1780
The Society of the Cincinnati, The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
French military physician Clément Joseph Tissot pioneered the field of therapeutic exercise in the treatment of disease. His treatise on the subject, published in France in 1780, prescribed specific exercises for certain conditions and illnesses, the duration and intensity of which were to be adapted to the age and temperament of the patient. He warned of the dangers of too much bedrest, even in the treatment of such debilitating diseases as smallpox. He also discussed in detail the benefits of a great variety of sports to the maintenance of good health.
Click for a larger view.
Edward Paine, Nathaniel West, and George Hubbard to Priscilla Birge
November 17, 1776
The Society of the Cincinnati, The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
This letter from Capt. Jonathan Birge’s fellow officers to his wife, Priscilla, informs her of his death. Jonathan Birge, a Connecticut captain during the New York Campaign, was wounded in his left shoulder on October 28, 1776, “by a muzzle of a gun being struck off by a cannon ball” during the Battle of White Plains. He died from his wounds on November 10 after the doctor “found the wound much worse than our apprehensions.” Captain Birge was forty-two years old and left behind Priscilla and six children.
Click for a larger view.
“Anchor’d in the haven of Rest”
Souvenir maker unknown
20th century
On loan from Glenn A. Hennessey, who represents Jabez Smith, Jr. in the Society of the Cincinnati in the State of Connecticut
Jabez Smith, Jr., served as lieutenant of marines on the Continental ship Trumbull, perishing aboard ship in 1780 in a renowned battle with the British privateer Watt. An officer who participated wrote of the engagement, “It is beyond my power to give an adequate idea of the carnage, slaughter, havock and destruction…I hope it won’t be treason if I don’t except even Paul Jones…we may dispute titles with him.” Smith was laid to rest in Boston’s Granary Burying Ground, where today he lies near Crispus Attucks and Paul Revere. His headstone was topped with a handsome bas relief artwork depicting the ship Trumbull, a carving which has since become a symbol for the cemetery and reproduced on a variety of souvenir plaques, memorializing the grief felt for all the fallen patriots.
Click for a larger view.
A Military Journal during the American Revolutionary War, from 1775 to 1783
James Thacher
Boston: Published by Richard & Lord, 1823
The Society of the Cincinnati, The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
Tipped into this family copy of Thacher’s Military Journal is a page from his original diary that reads: “We have been several times without meat for several successive days & then as many days without bread, & without forage for our horses, & destitute of medicine & necessary stores for our sick soldiers. These complicated sufferings & privations are such that the patience of our army is on the point of being exhausted. But we have one great consolation, we have a Washington for our Commander. In him we have full faith & entire confidence we believe him capable of doing more & better for us & for the cause of our country than any other man in existence.”
Click for a larger view.
Society of the Cincinnati Eagle insignia owned by James Tilton
Made by Jeremiah Andrews (d. 1817)
ca. 1784-1791
The Society of the Cincinnati, Gift of Elizabeth Tilton Beaudrias, 2021
James Tilton, a doctor from Dover, joined the Delaware Regiment as a surgeon in January 1776. He witnessed the battles of Long Island and White Plains, and the retreat through New Jersey. In April 1777, Dr. Tilton was appointed as a Continental Army hospital physician and served in that role until the end of the war. He is most renowned for insisting on separating the sick from the wounded to prevent the spread of disease. After the war, Dr. Tilton joined the Delaware State Society of the Cincinnati and was elected its first president. This gold and enamel Eagle insignia, owned and worn by Dr. Tilton, was one of the first Society of the Cincinnati insignias made in America and represents his membership in the Society and his service during the war.