Page:American Medical Biographies - Kelly, Burrage.djvu/211

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
CADWALADER
189
CADWALADER

He was for four years in close touch with the emigrants in Kansas and during the days of border warfare supplied the settlers with rifles bought by subscription.

During the Civil War he was sent twice on special missions to the army. At the request of Gov. Andrew he served as a volunteer surgeon at Camp Winfield Scott near York-town in April and May, 1862. He returned north with a shipload of those wounded at the battle of Williamsburg, and in 1863 he went as inspector of army hospitals along the Atlantic seaboard.

According to the fashion of those days he had a general practice, although his interests were surgical, and he was visiting surgeon at the Massachusetts General Hospital from 1853– 1884. When antiseptic methods were introduced he was nearly sixty, but still young enough to enthusiastically adopt them. As a result he had the first two successful ovariotomies in the record of the Massachusetts General Hospital, and thus ushered in the era of abdominal surgery at that institution.

Dr. Cabot died in Boston April 13, 1885. One son, Arthur T., became a surgeon (q. v.).

Cadwalader, Thomas (1708–1779)

Thomas Cadwalader was the son of John Cadwalader, who came to Pennsylvania from Wales in 1689, and of Martha, daughter of Dr. Edward Jones. When nineteen or twenty years of age, his father sent him to England and France to complete his medical education. In France he is said to have studied at Rheims University and in England to have spent a year studying and dissecting under William Cheselden, the distinguished anatomist and surgeon.

On his return to Philadelphia, he soon secured a large practice and became a very influential citizen. He was associated with Franklin in the establishment of the Philadelphia Library and was among the first to adopt the method of inoculation as a preventive against small-pox, in this country.

So far as now known, Thomas Cadwalader was the first teacher of practical anatomy in this country. According to Caspar Wistar, Cadwalader, upon his return from Europe, "made dissections and demonstrations for the instruction of the elder Dr. Shippen and some others who had not been abroad." According to Dr. Charles Winslow Dulles, the date of this instruction was probably 1730 or 1731, because this was the time of his return from Europe, and the1 time when the elder Dr. Shippen was eighteen or nineteen years old and engaged in his medical studies. The place in which these instructions were given, Wistar says, "was in a building on the back part of a lot, on which the Bank of Pennsylvania now stands."

In 1738 Dr. Cadwalader married Hannah, daughter of Thomas Lambert, Jr., of New Jersey, and for several years spent the greater part of his time in that state, near the site of the present city of Trenton, but about 1750 he appears to have returned to Philadelphia.

In 1742 he performed an autopsy said to be probably the first scientific one in this country. The only known publication of Dr. Cadwalader's is an essay, the title-page of which reads, "An Essay on the West India Dry Gripes, to which is added an extraordinary case in physics. Philadelphia. Printed and sold by Benjamin Franklin, MDCCXLV." This was one of the earliest medical monographs published in America.

Dr. Cadwalader was one of the founders of the Pennsylvania Hospital, and trustee of the Academy and College of Philadelphia. He was one of the original members of the Philadelphia Medical Society, and the first named of the three vice-presidents chosen when the American Society for Promoting Useful Knowledge was consolidated with the American Philosophical Society in 1768, of which Franklin was president. He died November 14, 1779, in Philadelphia.

The grace and attractiveness of his deportment, on one occasion, was the means of saving his life. In 1760 Lieutenant Bruluman of the Provincial militia was executed at Philadelphia for the murder of a young gentleman named Scull. The murderer was weary of life, and had resolved to shoot the first person he met and then give himself up to justice. He walked out with "a fusil in his hand." The commons, now Penn Square in Philadelphia, abounded with game. He met Dr. Cadwalader who bowed and said: "Good morning, sir; a fine day for your sport." Bruluman afterwards declared that though Dr. Cadwalader was an entire stranger there was in his manner something indescribable, which made it impossible to kill him. His resolution to kill someone, however, remained, and he killed Mr. Scull.

Dr. Cadwalader's professional services during the War of the Revolution seem to have been restricted to the occasional performance of duties laid upon him by Congress and assisting his friend and junior, Dr. Morgan, who was at that time director-general of the military hospitals. It is supposed that Dr. Cadwalader had from him some appointment,