Page Sixteen THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, September 15, 1 944 . Dr. Israel Moses, Surgeon Fighting Hero of the Civil War By BURRILL B. CROHN, M. D. gical operation and prescribe. for the sick, I don't attend any ladies!" From Williamsburg, Virginia, they are "on to Richmond," and the Penin- sula Campaign is in full swing. Shortly he speaks of being wounded, but of paying little heed to his injury of the previous day. The transfer of Colonel Nelson Tay- lor, the Commanding Officer, 'to an- other Brigade, and his replacement by a stranger, seemed to have a determin- ing influence in the next step of his career. For in October of that same year, 1862, Lieutenant Colonel Moses'', of the Third Excelsior Brigade, be- comes Dr. I. Moses, Surgeon of Volun- teers stationed at Finley Hospital, Washington, D. C. EDITOR'S NOTE: This fascinating article about one of the most inter- esting figures in the War of the States served as the text of an address delivered by Dr. Burrill B. Crohn of New York at the 50th anniversary meeting of the American Jewish Historical Society at Dropsie College for Hebrew and Cognate 'Learning. in Philadelphia,- Fa., on June 14, 1942. This paper was published in the January-February, 1944, issue of the Journal of the Mount Sinai Hospital of New York.. The Jewish News is pleased to be able to reprint it with the special permission of Dr. Joseph 11. Globus, editor-in-chief of the Journal of Mount Sinai Hospital. Dr. Crohn :s the brother of Lawrence W. Crohn, one of Detroit's outstanding Zionist and community leaders. to mold the true principles of inter- national affairs in London, Paris, Ghent and Geneva. In such a capacity he was represent- n g Governor de Witt Clinton . a n d the State and the City of New York. He was present at the negotiations leading to the sign- ing of the Treaty of Ghent. DR. ISRAEL MOSES I T IS A FITTING TRIBUTE to this individual to grant him the title of surgeon, for most of the active years of his short career were dedi- cated to the task of surgery. His roles included that of Military Surgeon to the United States Forces in the Mexi- can War, first surgeon on the staff of the - then recently incorporated Jews' Hospital, New York City, sur- geon to- the United States Volunteers in the War of the States, surgeon again in civil practice to the end of his abbreviated days. A fighting but a kindly man, cul- tured, educated and sensitive, he spent most of his life in army camps and in public institutions with a longing that was evident in his letters and corre- spondence, for the happiness of a life,'never fully to be achieved. In the year of •his birth, in New York City, in 1823, the family name of Moses had already been well estab- lished for probity and for public acts, both in that City and in Philadelphia. l is illustrious g r a-n d f a t h e r, Isaac Moses, had immigrated from Germany, in 1742, settling first in New York and marrying there his cousin, Reyna Levy. Resenting the intrusion of the British during the Revolutionary War, he, with other patriotic Jews, fled to Philadelphia, to which the seat of gov- ernment had been removed. Some time later he returned t,g New York to spend the latter part of his useful life es a prominent citizen. - Robert Morris's Partner The quiet but highly patriotic efforts tif Isaac Moses during the period of the Revolutionary War have received but insufficient attention and recogni- tion. He was a partner of Robert Mor- ris, a member of the militia who ad- vanced to the United States 20,000 pounds in Specie in exchange for Con- tinental dollars" to finante the Canada Expedition, for which he among oth- ers was thanked by John Hancock. The energy and capability of this man are seen in his many public accom- plishments. He helped. raise hinds for Instituting the first Fire Department in Philadelphia; his efforts helped in- stitute the first Bank of the United States; through his appeal to the State Legislature in behalf of 50 merchants of Philadelphia and New York, the first Custom House was established in the latter city. He was honorary Col- . onel of the Militia during the Revolu- tionary War; and founder and member_ for 30 years of the New York Cham- ber of Commerce. Benjamin Franklin referred to him as "my friend of aus- tere culture and • true knowledge," a tribute of veritable merit from the tongue of that most wise of men and most frank of critics. App'arently his son Joshua carried on the tradition of the Moses family as honorable merchants and as men of affairs. The existence of an embossed invitation and card of admission to the coronation of the Emperor Na- poleon I in Paris, bespeaks his rec. ognition as an He helpad Heritage of Good Name Israel Moses, one of the seven sons of Joshua Moses, entered life in 1823 with the heritage of a good name, the scion of a family of recognized. culture and fortune. The school days of Israel Moses seem to have been those of any boy born and bred in the metropolis; but on the day of his graduation from Columbia College as a Bachelor of Arts (1841) he was awarded two medals, one for "proficiency in Latin," and one : for "merit in English." His diploma as a Master of Arts followed after three years. During that period he was un- doubtedly serving under the precep- torship of a recognized practitioner of medicine, for in 1845 he received his degree of Doctor of Medicine from the College of Physicians and Surgeons, an engraved diploma of exceptional elegance, bearing among others the signature of -the illustrious Dr. Valen- tine Mott. -His internship at the New York Hos- pital probably represented as fine a practical course of training as was afforded anywhere in this country, for that institution, founded in 1767, one of the three existing hospitals in the metropolitan area, represented then as it does now a standard of unexcelled scientific merit. Served in Mexican War Tha—t very year saw the outbreak of the war against Mexico; in fact, within a • month of the day upon which his two diplomas had been granted as a graduate intern, the battles of Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma were being fought (May, 1846). The spirit and .the strength of his forbears seemed to inspire the matur- ing physician; rather than enter civil- ian practice in a time of national crisis, he elected to serve in the minute corps that represented the nucleus of the medical department of the small stand- ing army of that day. Appointed sur- geon, Jan. 187 1847, he served with the army of occupation (Vera Cruz and Toluca, Mexico) from July, 1847, to September, 1848. After the signing of the peace con-. eluding the Mexican War, his services with the Army continued. His regi- ments covered a wide range of terri- tory including such far-flung encamp- ments as Wisconsin, Fort Leavenworth, Missouri, with a Rifle Regiment and with the First Artillery in Oregon, and the then Washington TerritorieS as well as in Texas. His. application for sick leave was granted . -in 1855 and was soon followed by his resignation because of ill health. The Building of _Hospitals • The City of New York,'in 1855, was reputed to number about 510,000 souls; included in this census were 25,000 to 30,000 Jews, constituting a rapidly growing, respectable, and proSperous nucleus within the community, But not all . were prosperous, for the abor- tive revolutionary outbreaks in Eu- rope in 1848 had initiated a wave of immigration to the freer soil of the New World; in this wave of immigra- tion were included many of the in- telligentsia of Germany, worthy but impoverished by their trek. The large and growing metropolitan city, for its size and population, was as yet poorly provided with hospitals. Old Bellevue Hospital, founded in 1736, had already served the masses for well over a hundred years, as had also the New York Hospital, the proto- type of the private hospital of its day, with its chosen staff and meticulous careful efficiency. The need for new hospitals for the growing city became apparent at the turn of the half century; one notes the foundation of St. Vincent's Hospital (1849), a sectarian institution, and of St. Luke's Hospital (1850), based sim- ilarly on a selected creed. To Sampson Simson and his co-workers is credited the foundation of the Jews' Hospital, in 1852, a small building housing 45 beds for the care of the sick; sin-Tie and unassuming in design and concep- tion, sectarian too, in basis, as were all but the public city hospitals of that day. Medical and surgical beds and wards. were not yet divided, the specialties in practice not yet recog- nized. Soon after the doors of the Jews' Hospital had been opened to receive the sick, Dr. Israel Moses, Surgeon, recently retired from the United States Army Medical Corps, was appointed an Attending Surgeon to that institu- tion. --• - Enlists as Fighting Man - The very first case admitted to the _ new hospital was one of fistula-in-ano, operated successfully, and so recorded by Dr. I. Moses, Surgeon. From that date to the outbreak of the Civil War the surgical achievements of Moses are written into the records and books of that office, • operations covering every field of the human anatomy from in- fections to hernia, from trephining to amputation. The clarion call for volunteers enun- ciated by his President, Abraham Lin- coln, results in a stern purpose_ and in a resolute decision of unusual nature. Incredible as it may seem to us, with our conception of highly specialized functions allocated in times of national emergency, Dr. Moses answers this call for freemen and is mustered in, not as a surgeon, not in his capacity of a medical man or health officer, but on July 23, 1862, as Lieutenant Colonel, .second in command, of the Third Reg- iment, Excelsior, or Sickle's- Brigade, of the United States Army, a fighting, man, stationed at Camp Scott, Staten Island. At the age of 3$, Lt. Col._ Moses is whipping into shape a regiment .of raw recruits gathered from: New York City, from various sections of the State, and some few companies', from neighboring New Jersey. Nor is he alone .of his family represented in, ,tlie Federal Service, for his older brother Isaac is also enrolled as Major and as Assistant Adjutant General in the United States Volunteers. The summer heat of New York Bay is already forgotten in the shivering* blasts and wet mists that cover the camp on the Potomac, 50 miles_belOw . Washington. The regiment ;is. •. -being trained as part of Hooker's Division of the Army of. the .P'otOinac. 1VIOclellan is a stern disciplinarian, the enemy is in strength, and the stigma of Bull Run must be erased. _ Almost Forgot His M.D. Four months later the regiment is still encamped; his bookcase, for he must have a bookcase, is a biscuit box turned upside down;• his library con- sists of•twenty or more books of a de- cidedly warlike character. An empty gun-chest serves as a chair; he reads himself to. sleep every night by candle light. Years in the army have carried him far from his sheltered and educated boyhood, but the old memories and tenderness are still there, for his let- ters to his sister-in-law and family are always affectionate and beautiful. "I am so in the habit of writing my name as above (I. Moses, Lt. Col.) _that I have unconsciously done so. I have almost forgotten the M.. D .; though I occasionally perform a sur- . ' His Practical Mind After the Peninsula Campaign, the lack of true efficiency in the Medical Department of the Army was more fully recognized than ever. It is therefore not strange that at this time Moses heeds the call of the administration for more and more doc- tors for the rapidly growing forces of combat. The scene of activities now - shifts to Eastern Tennessee. The warring days of late December, 1862, saw the Army of the Cumberland, under Rosencrans, facing before Murfreesboro the gray, tattered Army of the Tennessee under the Fabain Bragg. Both armies 'lay in the trenches in the rain, in the coldest winter nights of many a year. Supplies were late in coming; the improvised" shelters of the Sanitary Commission, however, were well stocked. During the cold weather, Dr. Moses with his usual foresight and thought- fulness for the comfort of the sick and wounded, had all the ice-houses in the post filled to - their utmost capacity with a good quality of ice. A perusal of the surgical reports of the Army shows to what extent fresh cold water was utilized as the routine dressing of wounds and injuries. Another hobby of the Medical Di- rector is to institute gardens and tilled areas wherein the convalescents may work and live and raise fresh vege- tables for the boys in the hospital. Already in 1864, the American Jour- nal of the Medical Sciences Published a paper entitled "Surgical Noteg of Cases of Gunshot Injuries Occurring During the Advance of the Army of the Cumberland in the Spring of 1863," by Dr. I. Moses. Every type of gunshot wound of face, head, extrem- ities, body cavities, is amply covered with sketchy but intelligent details and remarks. The results are often surprisingly good, conservative treat- ment is encouraged at all times. Opposed Amputation . • Dr. Moses has an aversion to am- putation, except in urgently clear in- dications on the field of battle. In the more quiet atmosphere of his base hospitals his natural scientific logic and his innate conservatism come to the - fore. He has saved thiee out of four cases of gunshot wound of the upper extremities without amputation; all -the : wounds of the forearm and hand recovered without sacrifice of the limb. For the first' time he publishes his views on the conservative treatment : of gunshot wounds of the knee, He Criticizes the disappointing reSultS limn amputation; he puts in a clarion call for open incisions and free drain- . age and encourages a more conserva- tive and preventive course aimed at -.saving a functioning extremity. The -long inactive spring of 1863 has passed; the Army of the Cumberland is again on the march, Bragg has been Outwitted and outflanked, and has by necessity evacuated the small -city of Chattanooga and gathered his forces in the hills and impregnable moun- tains south of the Tennessee River. In September, Moses receives his orders to take charge of the hospitals and medical facilities freed by their re- treat. He is Surgeon-in-Chief of the General Hospital and Medical Director of the Post of Chattanooga. He will take charge of that host of wounded and injured, derelicts and broken men that sbe gathered to him during the succeeding three months of bit- terly contested battles in the passes and on the slopes of Chickamauga, of Lookout Mountain, and of Missionary RiI In dge-t -the first few days of September' the Union losses were well over-13,000 men and officers killed and , wounded. (Continued. on Paw' 19),