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American Medical Biographies/Green, Samuel Abbott

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2781297American Medical Biographies — Green, Samuel Abbott1920

Green, Samuel Abbott (1830–1918)

Samuel Abbott Green, army surgeon, historian, was born in Groton, Massachusetts, March 16, 1830, the son of Dr. Joshua Green and Eliza Lawrence Green. He prepared for college at Lawrence Academy, Groton, and graduated from Harvard University in 1851. Having decided on a medical career, he became a pupil in the office of Dr. J. Mason Warren (q. v.), in 1851 and 1852, attended a course of lectures at Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, and then came back to Boston for study at the Harvard Medical School, from which he was graduated in 1854. Dr. Green then went to Paris to continue his medical study, and in 1854–55 returned to Boston to practise. It was on May 19, 1858, that he was commissioned surgeon of the Second Massachusetts Militia Regiment by Governor Banks. On the breaking out of the Civil War he entered the service as assistant surgeon of the First Massachusetts Regiment, and bore the distinction of being the first medical officer of the State to be mustered into the three years' service. He was surgeon of the Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment from September 2, 1861, to November 2, 1864, and had charge of the hospital ship Recruit in General Burnside's expedition to North Carolina, and later of the hospital steamer Cosmopolitan on the coast of South Carolina. He was chief medical officer at Morris Island during the siege of Fort Wagner in the summer of 1863, and was post surgeon at St. Augustine, Fla., in October, 1863, and at Jacksonville in March, 1864. He was with the army at the capture of Bermuda Hundred in May, 1864, and was acting staff surgeon in Richmond for three months following the surrender of that city in April, 1865.

In 1864 he was breveted lieutenant colonel for "gallant and distinguished services in the field."

Dr. Green organized a cemetery on Roanoke Island, one of the first regular burial places for Union soldiers during the war.

For six years after the war he held the position of superintendent of the Boston Dispensary. He was then appointed city physician, and during eleven years the performance of these duties endeared him to thousands by his tender devotion to the poor and the unfortunate.

Dr. Green's interest in city affairs led to his election as mayor in 1882. He served one term only during which he had the satisfaction of turning out of office three police commissioners.

During his life Dr. Green held many positions of trust and was a member of numerous societies. He served as a member of the School Board in 1860–62 and in 1866–72, as trustee of the Boston Public Library in 1868–78, and as acting librarian in 1877. He was a fellow of the Massachusetts Medical Society, delivering the centennial address in 1881 on the History of Medicine in Massachusetts, a useful historical work of reference. Other positions he held were: Member of the Boston Society for Medical Observation, of the Boston Society for Medical Improvement, of the American Philosophical Society of Philadelphia, of the State Board of Health, Lunacy and Charity; president of the Channing Home for Consumptives, overseer of Harvard University; trustee, secretary and general agent of the Peabody Education Fund; a member of the Board of Commissioners to investigate the condition of the records, files, papers and documents in the State Department of Massachusetts, editor of the American Journal of Numismatics, and president of the American Numismatic Society. In 1896 the honorary degree of LL. D. was conferred upon him by the University of Nashville, Tennessee.

In his later life most of his time was spent at the building of the Massachusetts Historical Society, where he was librarian from 1868 until his death. He was a large and portly man, suffered with chronic dyspepsia and his temper was uncertain; several years before his death he had the misfortune to break his thigh by a fall on the street so that the latter part of his life was passed in a wheel-chair.

Dr. Green died in Boston, December 5, 1918, at the age of 88. He was buried in his native town, Groton.

Among his writings are the following publications: "My Campaign in America," a journal kept by Count William de Deux-Ponts, 1780–81, translated from the French MS., with an introduction and notes; "The Story of a Famous Book," an account of Dr. Benjamin Franklin's autobiography; "School Histories and Some Errors in Them"; "Epitaphs from the Old Burying Ground in Groton"; "Early Records of Groton, 1662– 1678"; "History of Medicine in Massachusetts"; "Groton During the Indian Wars"; "Groton During the Witchcraft Times"; "Boundary Lines of Old Groton"; "The Geography of Groton"; prepared for the use of the Applachian Mountain Club; "Groton Historical Series," three volumes; "An Account of the Physicians and Dentists of Groton"; "The Career of Benjamin Franklin," a paper read before the American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, May 25, 1893, on the 150th anniversary of its foundation, "An Address Before the Old Residents' Historical Association of Lowell," also an account of the library of the Massachusetts Historical Society, and a "List of the Early American Imprints" in the library of that society.

Dr. Green's reputation rests on his record as librarian of the Massachusetts Historical Society, where during his incumbency he saw the library grow from 8,000 volumes and 13,000 pamphlets to 50,000 volumes and 115,000 pamphlets; he was both a notable collector of books and a generous distributor of them. He was historian of his native town and wrote of the early history of Massachusetts. He was eccentric; lived for most of his life on Harrison Avenue, Boston, in a region long since deserted by fashion, where he won the love and confidence of his foreign-born neighbors. He was never married.

Lindsay Swift, himself a librarian, who knew Dr. Green well, says of him: "The Doctor was indeed a charming companion, a good friend, a marvellous teller of stories and choice recollections. Life of a sort seems to have stolen in on him in the close retirement of his alcoves and cabinets. But of that wider life, which implies building more wisely on the structure of the past, he had not a glimmering. He was born into rather agreeable conditions, and they suited his temperament and his mentality. Some go too fast in the chariot of time; others are willing to jog along easily, advancing a little each day; but the Doctor was willing to stay exactly where he was, never idle, but never pressing forward. Verily it is hard not to say of him as Isaiah said of the Egyptians, "their strength is to sit still"

Boston Med. and Surg. Jour., 1918, vol. clxxix, 813–813.
Har. Grads. Mag., Lindsay Swift, 1919, vol. xxvii. No. 107, pages 327–330.