El Dorado News-Times

History Minute: Dr. Hugh Williamson, a maverick in his time

- Dr. Ken BriDges Local columnist

In medicine, small details and small actions make the difference between life and death. Doctors and nurses work tirelessly to save lives and often go unnamed or unapprecia­ted. Dr. Hugh Williamson is a figure largely unknown in modern times, but he was praised as one of the best medical minds in the young United States. His actions during the American Revolution saved countless lives and advanced military medicine to begin saving more in the future.

Hugh Williamson was born in a small farm town in southeast Pennsylvan­ia in 1735. His parents, both Irish immigrants, worked as clothes makers and merchants. His health was very bad when he was young, pushing him in a different direction.

In 1754, he enrolled in the new

College of Philadelph­ia (the modern University of Pennsylvan­ia). He graduated in 1757 and began working as a Latin tutor at the college. He had developed a strong aversion to slavery at a young age. He considered a career as a minister – and was even ordained as a Presbyteri­an minister — but was repelled by church divisions. In 1763, after a stint as a math professor at the college, he turned to medicine. Williamson traveled to Scotland and to Holland to study medicine, where he earned a medical degree in 1764. He set up a practice in the colonies and earned respect for his academic writings.

In 1777, he attempted to enlist in the Continenta­l Army as a surgeon, but he was rejected on the grounds that there were no openings available. Instead, he returned to North Carolina and began secretly working with merchants in the Bahamas to import medicines into America, breaking the British blockade. His actions provided the colonies with an important avenue of medical supplies. From 1779 to 1782, he served as the Surgeon General of the North Carolina Militia.

He also proved to be an able diplomat. In 1780, with the blessing of his superiors, Williamson convinced the British to allow him to treat wounded prisoners and to inspect the conditions of prisoner of war camps in South Carolina. He was shocked by the poor conditions of the camps and feared a deadly smallpox epidemic was about to lay waste to the camps. He urged an immediate sanitation program to avert disaster. The British commanders were impressed by his pleas and respected his knowledge and agreed. The epidemic was averted. Williamson accomplish­ed this generation­s before the Geneva Convention afforded any kind of protection­s or rights to prisoners of war.

Williamson’s work with the Continenta­l Army became crucial as the British tried to move into North Carolina. American forces were secluded in the Dismal Swamp near Wilmington to pin down the British. He insisted on a program of strict hygiene for troops to avoid outbreaks of disease, including training new recruits in the importance of cleanlines­s. Disease often devastated combat units. More soldiers died from disease and camp-borne epidemics than from battlefiel­d injuries in the wars of this time period. Where the swamp could have become an even deadli

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