In 1676, Richard Wiseman recalled an incident from his days as a surgeon in the royalist armies during the British Civil Wars. Following the siege of Taunton, he was called upon to treat a man whose
Face, with his Eyes, Nose, Mouth, and forepart of the Jaws, with the Chin, was shot away, and the remaining parts of them driven in. One part of the Jaw hung down by his Throat, and the other part pasht into it. I saw the Brain working out underneath the lacerated Scalp on both sides between his Ears and Brows.
Faced with this horrific scene, Wiseman noted simply that he ‘was somewhat troubled where to begin’.Footnote 1 Many new challenges faced the medical personnel deployed in the Civil Wars, the English sphere of which represented the first significant conflict in that country for over 100 years. Civil War armies were reasonably large by contemporary standards and casualty figures were high.Footnote 2 Technological advances had led to the development of more sophisticated weaponry, with greater and more accurate killing power, whilst many who survived suffered from terrible wounds.Footnote 3
A key feature of the so-called ‘Military Revolution’ of the early modern period was the emergence of armies raised on a larger and more permanent scale, supported by greater financial and bureaucratic mechanisms. In assessing how far Civil War armies confirm evidence of the Military Revolution in Britain during this period, the historiography has focused on issues such as drill, discipline, equipment, organization, funding, and supply.Footnote 4 The issue of medical provision within this context has largely been ignored. Yet, if the Military Revolution in Britain is to be fully assessed, then the influence of continental knowledge and practice upon army medical services must also be considered. Quality medical care was vitally important in influencing an army's fighting capacity, and the strategic and tactical choices available to its commanders.Footnote 5 Harold Cook argued that it was after the Glorious Revolution that the medical infrastructure of the British armed forces was brought in line with continental practices, particularly those of the Dutch army, though he conceded that the transformation ‘had its roots in previous decades’.Footnote 6 In fact, as this article will demonstrate, almost all the developments identified by Cook can be found in Civil War armies.
By far the most comprehensive study of Civil War medical provision is from Eric Gruber von Arni, which is particularly successful in utilizing the archives of parliament's permanent military hospitals of the Savoy and Ely House to provide an authoritative account of hospital care and nursing during the wars. However, he devoted less attention to regimental medical staff or how medical developments in the wars related to long-term developments in the military. If his argument that the Civil Wars ‘elicited a dramatic improvement’ in the medical care afforded to military casualties is to be accepted, then more consideration needs to be given to the personnel who delivered day-to-day treatments to Civil War armies in the field.Footnote 7 Writing in 1902, C. H. Firth expressed a rather uncomplimentary opinion of these men, regarding the large majority as ‘not remarkably skilful’ and some ‘notoriously incompetent’.Footnote 8 Seventy years later, Clive Holmes was in agreement.Footnote 9 Even Gruber von Arni regarded army surgeons as ‘the least competent members of the trade’.Footnote 10 As Margaret Pelling argued, the eccentric behaviour of early modern practitioners was exaggerated by nineteenth-century writers to distance themselves from the past, whilst modern medicine represented the ideal.Footnote 11 The lack of a fresh perspective since Firth's time has simply perpetuated his views.Footnote 12
This article will argue that like other technological and tactical aspects of the Military Revolution, the English were well aware of current medical practice in European armies and endeavoured to implement similar procedures during the Civil Wars. Most failures can be attributed to administrative and financial miscarriages, rather than ignorance of contemporary medical developments. Moreover, there is little to suggest that medics mobilized for Civil War armies were any less capable than those who practised civilian medicine in this period. Unfortunately, due to discrepancies in the surviving evidence, this article has a significant bias towards the larger parliamentary armies but royalist comparisons and examples from parliament's other regional armies and garrisons will be used where possible.
I
Theoretically, each of the parliamentarian armies had one or two physicians, one or two surgeons, and an apothecary attached to the general staff, whilst each regiment had its own surgeon assisted by two mates. Like many of the military reforms of this period, this arrangement was based on that employed by the Dutch army in the Eighty Years War.Footnote 13 It was the system that Cook noted that ‘the British were accustomed to expect’ by the beginning of William and Mary's reign and, in fact, seems to have been established practice in English armies by the time of the Civil Wars.Footnote 14 A similar scheme was suggested in 1621 for a proposed army intended to recover the Palatinate and was actually employed in the army sent against the Scottish Covenanters in 1639.Footnote 15 The adoption of the Dutch-style model brought English military medical provision in line with one of the foremost European armies of the day. Only the Swedish army of Gustavus Adolphus could boast more regimental medical personnel, with an extra two surgeons per regiment/brigade.Footnote 16 Of course, the medical provision stipulated on paper was not always implemented in practice. As Holmes pointed out, John Lilburne's regiment lacked a surgeon throughout the Eastern Association's northern campaigns in 1644.Footnote 17 In mitigation, efforts were made to cover for absences. Roger Dixon (surgeon to Henry Bulstrode's regiment in the earl of Essex's army) cared for Thomas Tyrell's regiment until Tyrell got a new surgeon and one John Stanley cared for Sir John Meyrick's regiment until John Woodward arrived to take up his appointment.Footnote 18
Parliament also copied the novel concept introduced by the Dutch of paying their troops all year round, not just during the campaigning season.Footnote 19 Interestingly, the remuneration of parliamentarian physicians and apothecaries compares advantageously to their Dutch counterparts. Physicians in the Netherlands received 600 guilders a year, which roughly equated to £100.Footnote 20 At the start of the war, the two physicians in Essex's army, Richard Gardiner and Edward Odling, were allocated 6s 8d a day, which amounts to more than £100 per year.Footnote 21 In spring 1643, the wage was raised to 10s a day and they were issued with back-dated warrants for the additional pay to the date of their commissions.Footnote 22 Thereafter, this was the going rate.Footnote 23 From 1649 onwards, the wage varied, possibly reflecting senior and junior status. For example, of the two physicians to the army for the invasion of Ireland, William French was paid at the 6s 8d rate but Joseph Waterhouse at 10s per day.Footnote 24 The apothecaries, who received no daily pay in the Dutch armies, were paid 5s a day in the parliamentarian armies, rising to 6s 8s in 1647, and sometimes had two assistants at 2s 6d per day each.Footnote 25 Physicians and apothecaries were also able to claim expenses.Footnote 26
Parliamentarian surgeons were paid the same as those in the Netherlands, who could expect a wage of 25 stivers a day.Footnote 27 The military author John Cruso calculated this equated to 4s, whilst surgeons’ mates received the equivalent of 2s 6d.Footnote 28 Thus, with some exceptions at the start of the war,Footnote 29 this was the pattern settled upon.Footnote 30 The same rates applied to the surgeons on the general staff.Footnote 31 Those who incurred expenses beyond those which were usually expected received recompense from the public purse, whilst each regimental surgeon received money for a chest of medicaments.Footnote 32 The provision for surgeons’ chests, introduced in the Dutch army by 1612, had been brought into English armies by Charles I for the expedition to the Île de Ré in 1627, though apparently he did not honour the bill.Footnote 33
However, it is well known that army wages were far from regularly paid in the Civil Wars.Footnote 34 Thomas Trapham, surgeon to Philip Skippon's regiment in Essex's army, was forced to petition the House of Commons in October 1644 for his arrears, whilst Lord Willoughby's surgeon, Isaac Demergue, was imprisoned for debt after his arrears were unpaid.Footnote 35 The failure to pay and supply regimental medical personnel potentially had a crucial impact on their army's military capabilities. For example, throughout summer 1644, Essex's army suffered from a complete lack of supplies, despite the earl's repeated requests.Footnote 36 By the time his army reached Lostwithiel, frequent deaths hampered their efforts to hold off royalist attacks because the surgeons were ‘ill stored with provisions’.Footnote 37 On 1 November, four surgeons in Essex's army were referred to the Commissioners for Martial Affairs for ignoring orders to repair to the army shortly before the second battle of Newbury ‘to the great Detriment of the Service’.Footnote 38 Two weeks previously, the neglected state of Essex's surgeons had been a matter of concern and it seems that the £4 advance they had received was not enough to convince them that their past and future wages would be honoured.Footnote 39
Eric Gruber von Arni argued that the royalists’ lackadaisical approach to administration engendered insufficient medical provision but this assessment was based on sparse documentation surviving from the royalist headquarters at Oxford and, as Jonathan Worton highlighted, may not reflect the situation in the king's other armies and garrisons.Footnote 40 Recent historiography has shown that military administration in the king's camp was much more successful than previously thought, though the lack of evidence makes it impossible to tell if a uniform pattern of medical organization and pay existed in royalist armies.Footnote 41 A pay establishment for the royalist garrison at Worcester in June 1643 allocated 2s 6d per day for one surgeon for every horse regiment.Footnote 42 During the same period, Sir William Russell (governor of Worcester) paid the surgeon of his foot regiment, Richard Addis, 5s a day, money to resupply his chest of medicaments and surgical instruments, and 10s a week for his apprentice (who was presumably acting as his mate).Footnote 43 At Lichfield, the surgeons seem to have been paid per cure, whilst Dr Whittaker the physician was paid £1 5s per week.Footnote 44 Elsewhere, fragmentary remains from a royalist account book suggests a standard rate: £10 each was paid to six surgeons but it is unclear what period of employment this sum covered.Footnote 45
II
Although Firth suggested that the wages paid to parliamentarian physicians were suitable for ‘a man of some standing in his profession’, he claimed that those offered to surgeons were ‘too small to secure really able men’.Footnote 46 Admittedly, surgeons sometimes found their wages unsatisfactory. In October 1655, Thomas Fothergill (surgeon to the Protector's regiment of horse) claimed his wages were ‘farre short of a subsistance’.Footnote 47 However, the parliamentarian surgeons’ day-rate was the same as that accorded to a lieutenant of a foot regiment: an interesting comparison given that Firth concluded that ‘the officers both of horse and foot were well paid’.Footnote 48 Furthermore, unlike infantry officers’ wages, surgeons’ wages responded to changes in the economic climate until 1658, when the Protectoral government was financially over-stretched.Footnote 49 At this time in Scotland, George Monck ordered his surgeons to be entered as privates in regimental muster rolls so that they could earn an extra 9d a day.Footnote 50 Surgeons’ salaries in the parliamentary armies were certainly more generous than in the navy, where a surgeon received 30s a month and his mate 20s a month.Footnote 51 These rates were raised to 50s and 30s respectively in 1653.Footnote 52
Yet, what makes Firth's claim particularly bold is that it is extremely difficult to discern what a surgeon might expect to be paid in this period. Early modern surgeons (and indeed physicians, though they seldom cared to admit it) earned their living on a case-by-case basis by negotiating a contract with their patient (or the patient's family or friends), in which the practitioner received an agreed fee in return for the time their patient spent under their cure.Footnote 53 The fees agreed would vary according to the severity of the condition and the length of time over which treatment was administered. Contracts that appear lucrative at first sight often masked the fact that the surgeon might be treating the patient for several years.Footnote 54 Salaried positions were unusual and where they existed, a practitioner expected to supplement this with other commissions.Footnote 55 Surgeons stationed in garrison towns, for example, may have acquired clients from the civilian population upon whom they were billeted. As Cook noted, the prominence of a military position provided the opportunity to build up contacts and reputation, both of which might be used to expand a surgeon's civilian practice when he left the army.Footnote 56 Anne Digby demonstrated that at least from the eighteenth century, state-salaried positions were eagerly contested, despite sometimes low wages.Footnote 57 The dangers and hardships of war may have made army positions less attractive than state positions, but for those prepared to brave the risk, there were rewards to be had.
Indeed, loyalty to a cause brought the promise of material rewards beyond simple wages. Even surgeons like Trapham might be rewarded with an honorary MD, whilst after the Restoration, John Knight (surgeon to Prince Rupert's forces at Leicester in 1645) was appointed serjeant-surgeon to Charles II.Footnote 58 On 16 July 1649, the Commons passed an act enabling those who had served in their armies to use their pay debentures to purchase crown lands.Footnote 59 Trapham redeemed his debentures to acquire parcels of land in Lincolnshire.Footnote 60 Likewise, Daniel Judd, surgeon to Sir Arthur Hesilrige's regiment in the New Model Army, purchased several messuages in Middlesex.Footnote 61 The acquisition of land brought the benefits of status, diversification of income and investment. Furthermore, like other officers, surgeons brought debentures well below their face-value from soldiers (for whom ready cash was more attractive) to acquire sizeable estates.Footnote 62 Judd used eight soldiers’ debentures to secure his purchases in Middlesex valued at £184 14s, whilst more spectacularly, Henry Cleare and his son, also Henry, brought the manors of Ennerdale in Cumberland and Radnage in Buckinghamshire for £1,278 19s 9d using thirty-seven soldiers’ debentures.Footnote 63
All this said, to suggest that meagre wages might put off able surgeons from joining Civil War armies presumes that such men would have only been attracted to the service by financial benefits. It is true that in some cases, parliament resorted to impressing surgeons and certainly individuals impressed to be soldiers were often unskilled or unsuitable men.Footnote 64 The same situation may have applied to impressed surgeons. However, for those who willingly volunteered, higher ideals may have over-ridden material concerns. Lawrence Loe, the earl of Essex's first staff surgeon, seems to have shared his master's objectives for the parliamentarian coalition. He apparently allied himself to the Presbyterian movement in London, which looked to the earl for leadership until Essex's death in 1646.Footnote 65 Thomas Burton, surgeon to the Southwark White Auxiliaries of the London Trained Bands, was described in 1652 by no less a man than Oliver Cromwell as ‘very honest and faithfull to the interest of the Commonwealth’.Footnote 66 Preambles couched in distinctly godly language preface the wills of parliamentarian surgeons John Anthony, Jonathan Crosse, Bradbury Clarke, and Henry Barnwell.Footnote 67 Perhaps more instructively, a number of former parliamentarian surgeons were practising non-conformity at the Restoration. The two Cleares were prosecuted for attending a Presbyterian conventicle at Kingston-upon-Thames in 1677 and Edward Atkinson was a close friend of the Socinian preacher John Knowles.Footnote 68 In 1665, Atkinson wrote a heart-breaking letter to Knowles following the death of his ‘Deare, Deare, Deare wife’ in which he took comfort in the ‘great Satisfacc[i]on’ she had found in attending the Independent congregation led by George Griffith in London during her last months.Footnote 69
Conversely, when William Clowes, serjeant-surgeon at the royalist army's headquarters in Oxford, begged to compound for his estates in 1646, he presented his royalism as an inevitability as the king's ‘sworn servant and surgeon for these 40 years’.Footnote 70 A more eccentric expression of royalism allegedly came from Edward Molins. Molins served as a surgeon with the royalist forces from the beginning of the war until he was captured at the siege of Arundel in January 1644. Nevertheless, his reputation as a lithotomist was such that Cromwell sought his treatment when suffering from a bladder stone in 1656.Footnote 71 The Genovese ambassador, a friend of Cromwell, reported that Molins gave Cromwell a draught to relieve the pain and then turned him upside down three times in imitation of how Molins claimed the Protector had treated England. Molins refused any payment but asked for a drink, which he then used to toast King Charles.Footnote 72
It was not only surgeons of whom Firth held a low opinion. He also questioned whether the physicians were sufficiently qualified because few were fellows of the College of Physicians.Footnote 73 As Table 1 shows, that much can be verified. However, Margaret Pelling has shown that in the seventeenth century there was ‘a lack of real difference in educational attainment between Fellows and a significant number of outsiders’.Footnote 74 The College's role was simply to license practitioners of physic within a seven-mile radius of London and so prosecution of those who practised without their licence took precedence over other activities such as literary production or anatomy lectures.Footnote 75 Moreover, although the most important academic centres for medical learning were located abroad, the College limited those with qualifications from foreign universities to becoming licentiates and censored continental authors in favour of the classical greats.Footnote 76
Considering Gruber von Arni's assertion that the number of graduate physicians in England was ‘abysmally low’ at this time, then Table 1 might give a brighter view of Civil War physicians’ educational credentials.Footnote 77 That said, university was not the only method of qualification. Many physicians learnt by apprenticeship and even university-educated physicians increasingly undertook practical apprenticeships alongside academic study.Footnote 78 In fact, former Civil War soldier-turned-physician Thomas Sydenham recommended apprenticeships over attendance at university for would-be physicians.Footnote 79
Sources: TNA, SP 18/131 fo. 59 (petition from Henry Hayhurst, 1656), SP 28/3b/ii fos. 440 and 442, SP 28/7 fo. 335 (pay warrant for Francis Neville, 2 June 1643), SP 28/11/ii fo. 17 (payment to Samuel Read, 1643), SP 28/24 fo. 62 (payments to Henry Glisson, 8 Apr. to 14 July 1644), SP 28/25 fo. 229 (pay warrant for Edward Emily, 14 Aug. 1644), SP 28/28 fo. 203 (pay warrant for William Staine/Stane, 12 Mar. 1645), SP 28/29/i fo. 9, SP 28/29/ii fo. 319 (pay warrant for Anthony Metcalfe, 7 Apr. 1645), SP 28/35/iii fo. 380 (payment to John St John, 1645), SP 28/36/ii fos. 145–6 (pay warrants for Thomas Payne and William French, 6 Feb. 1646), SP 28/36/v fo. 597 (certificate of service for Adam Stryall, 12 Dec. 1642), SP 28/42/i fo. 106 (certificate from Mr Trootbeck, 3 Oct. 1646), SP 28/62/i fo. 40, SP 28/70/iii fo. 595 (pay warrant for John Baber, 11 Sept. 1650), SP 28/80/i fo. 8 (pay warrant for John Short, 5 Aug. 1651), SP 28/125/iii fo. 345 (payment to Claudius Fenwick/Phenwithe, 1648–50), SP 28/126/i fo. 57 (Windsor garrison accounts, 1642–4), SP 28/128/xxvi fo. 5 (Plymouth garrison accounts, 1645–8), SP 28/144/10 fo. 2a (payment to John King, 5–19 July 1642); JHC, iii (1643–4), p. 150; CSPD, 1651, p. 251; Green, ed., Committee for compounding, iii, pp. 2242–3; Gruber von Arni, Justice to the maimed soldier, pp. 20, 27, 38, and 76; A. L. Wyman, ‘Barrow, Samuel (1625?–1683)’, ODNB; P. Elmer, ‘French, John (c. 1616–1657)’, ODNB; M. Jansson, ‘Turner, Samuel (d. 1647?)’, ODNB; W. Munk, The roll of the Royal College of Physicians of London (2 vols., London, 1861), i, pp. 160, 206, 231, 240, 244–5, 277, and 325; Royal College of Physicians of London, Annals, iii (1608–47), fo. 163a, and iv (1647–82), fos. 18a, 20b, and 26a; Foster, Alumni Oxonienses, i, p. 258, ii, p. 575, iv, p. 1579; J. Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses, part 1 (4 vols., Cambridge, 1922–7), ii, pp. 179, 223, and 226, iii, pp. 275 and 391, iv, pp. 55, 143, and 268; R. W. Innes Smith, English-speaking students of medicine at the University of Leyden (London, 1932), pp. 10, 83, 134, 185, 190, and 211; D. Prögler, English students at Leiden University, 1575–1650 (Abingdon, 2016), p. 194n.
Apprenticeship has suffered from later social devaluation, which might partly explain the negative portrayal of Civil War surgeons, as this was their main method of education.Footnote 80 In the London Barber-Surgeons’ Company, apprentices were bound to liverymen for at least seven years, which consisted of on-the-job training accompanied by teaching and personal study. Apprentices were admitted as freemen at the end of their term of service but none was allowed to practise surgery without first being examined by the Company.Footnote 81 Furthermore, regular dissections and lectures took place at Barber-Surgeons’ Hall, attendance at which was (apparently) compulsory for all the Company's surgeons.Footnote 82 Tables 2 to 6 give a rough indication of the proportion of Civil War surgeons who were free of the London Barber-Surgeons’ Company.Footnote 83 It must be stressed that this evidence should not be used too definitively, as it is sometimes impossible to make clear identifications between a particular Civil War surgeon and a man of the same name in the Barber-Surgeons’ Company.
Sources: E. Peacock, ed., The army lists of the roundheads and cavaliers (London, 1874), pp. 27–9, 31, 34–5, 37, 42, 44–5, and 48; TNA, SP 28/2A/i fos. 104 and 145 (pay warrants for Richard Thurston, 3 Sept. 1642, and Hugh Ward, 5 Sept. 1642), SP 28/2b/ii fos. 420–1 (pay warrants for James Cooke and James Swright/Wright, 18 Oct. 1642), SP 28/2b/iii fo. 534 (commission for Peter Sallenova, Sept. 1642), SP 28/3a/i fo. 45 (payment to Thomas Kinker, 9 Nov. 1642), SP 28/3a/iii fo. 285 (pay warrant for William de Margey/de Morger, 9 Nov. 1642), SP 28/3b/i fo. 397 (pay warrant to Roger Dixon, 18 Nov. 1642), SP 28/4 fos. 175 and 358 (pay warrants for Isaac de Morgan/ Demergue, 3 Dec. 1642, and for Ralph Nicholson, 27 Dec. 1642), SP 28/5 fos. 126, 310, and 341 (pay warrants for Henry Cleare, 21 Jan. 1643, John Waylett, 27 Feb. 1643, and Isaac Smitheis/Smythes, 28 Feb. 1643), SP 28/6/i fo. 92 (pay warrant for Thomas Symonds, 1 Mar. 1643), SP 28/6/ii fo. 277 (pay warrant for Llewellyn Price, 13 Apr. 1643), SP 28/7 fos. 85 and 316 (pay warrants for Nicholas Heath, 25 May 1643, and John Fletcher, 23 June 1643), SP 28/9 fo. 364 (bill for Francis Rishworth, 21 Aug. 1643), SP 28/18/i fo. 97 (pay warrant for Peter Francis, 18 Sept. 1644), SP 28/10 fos. 21 and 30 (billeting account for Robert Woodward, 1 Aug. to 2 Sept. 1643 and pay warrant for William Alley/Allen, 14 Sept. 1643), SP 28/16/i fo. 108 (pay warrant for Timothy Langley, 26 June 1644), SP 28/20 fo. 41 (Reading garrison accounts, 1644), SP 28/29/ii fos. 334–5 (pay warrant for John Franklin, 11 Apr. 1645), SP 28/121A fo. 133 (Warwick garrison accounts, 1643–4), SP 28/122/ii fo. 367 (payment to Stephen Beddard, 14 Apr. 1645), SP 28/126 fos. 10 and 64v (Windsor garrison accounts, 1642–5); SP 28/127 fo. 310v (Aylesbury garrison accounts, 1643–4), SP 28/128/xxvi fo. 6 (Plymouth garrison accounts, 1645–8), SP 28/129/viii fos. 6v–7 (Portsmouth garrison accounts, 1642–3), SP 28/146/xviii fo. 27 (pay warrant to Mr Bromfield, 14 Oct. 1643), SP 28/145 fo. 249 (payment to Mr Burton, 31 July 1642); JHC, iii (1643–4), p. 658; Guildhall Library (GL), MS 5265/1 (Register of freedom admissions, 1522–1665); GL, MS 5255/1 (Wardens' accounts and audit books, 1603–59), unpag.
Sources: TNA, SP 28/5 fo. 310 (pay warrant for John Waylett, 27 Feb. 1643), SP 28/12/ii fo. 204 (pay warrant for Edward Elsing, 21 Feb. 1644), SP 28/13/ii fo. 200 (pay warrant to for James Bowman, 4 Sept. 1643, SP 28/14/i fo. 180 (account of Thomas Forthergill, Jan. to Apr. 1644), SP 28/15/ii fos. 275 and 279 (pay warrants to William Le Neave, 13 May 1644, and Joseph Echell, 14 May 1644), SP 28/17/iii fos. 348 and 357 (payments to Mr Fudge, 15 Aug. 1644, and Mr Siler, 14 Aug. 1644), SP 28/19/iii fos. 346 and 387 (pay warrants for Lodowick Sommervell, 16 Oct. 1644, and Thomas Bullock, 20 Oct. 1644), SP 28/20/ii fo. 181 (pay warrant for John Vandale, 5 Nov. 1644), SP 28/20/iii fo. 353 (pay warrant for William Kseamd, 24 Nov. 1644), SP 28/21/i fos. 49, 54, 76, and 101 (payments to William Clarke, 14 Jan. 1645, Timothy Bond, 10 Dec. 1644, Mr Sandford, 18 Sept. 1644, and Edward Atkinson, 12 Dec. 1644), SP 28/23/i fos. 231 and 288 (payments to Mr Lindsey and Mr Gouldesborough, Mar. 1645), SP 28/24/i fo. 74 (payment to Mr Gutteridge, May 1644), SP 28/24/iv fo. 519v–520 (payments to Mr Goodrick, 23 Mar. 1645, and Edward Webb, 6 July 1644), SP 28/25/i fos. 135 and 138 (payments to Bradbury Clarke, 13 Aug. 1644, and Francis Loyal, 31 Aug. 1644), SP 28/25/ii fos. 217 and 311 (payments to John Walker, 9 Oct. 1644, and Thomas Tylor, 20 June 1644), SP 28/25/iii fos. 1 and 403 (pay warrants for Jonathan Crosse, 27 Aug. 1644, and Nicholas Seres, 25 Mar. 1644, SP 28/26/iii fos. 312 and 320 (pay warrants for Andrew Vanderlash, 18 Jan. 1645, and Enoch Bostock, 2 Aug. 1644), SP 28/35/iii fo. 371 (payments to Henry Lloyd, Ar. Purlevant, and Basset Jones, undated), SP 28/121A/iii fos. 13 and 15 (Burleigh House garrison accounts 1643–4), SP 28/121b/ii fos. 156 and 158 (Newport Pagnell garrison accounts, 1645), SP 28/122/i fo. 171 (payment to John Wasse, 2 May 1645), SP 28/127/1 fo. 18 (Newport Pagnell garrison accounts, 1646), SP 28/133/i fo. 98 (King's Lynn garrison accounts, 1646), SP 28/144/iii fo. 7a (payment to Samuel Browne, Jan. 1645), SP 28/145 fos. 264–84 (Eastern Association account book, 1644–5); GL, MS 5265/1; GL, MS 5255/1.
Sources: L. Spring, Waller's army (Farnham, 2007), pp. 75, 79, 109, 129, 156, and 159–60; TNA, SP 28/35/iv fo. 635 (payment to Henry Cleare, 25 Apr. 1645), SP 28/144/v fo. 80a (payment to Thomas Aisernelry, 19 Aug. 1644); GL, MS 5265/1; GL, MS 5257/5 (Barber Surgeons’ Company court minute book, 1621–51), fo. 391.
Sources: TNA, SP 28/30/ii fos. 130 and 172 (pay warrants for Mr Browne, 7 May 1648 and James Winter, 6 May 1645), SP 28/35/iii fos. 344 and 417 (Northampton garrison accounts, SP 28/42/ii fo. 180 (quartering for Edward Wentworth, 1646), SP 28/41/iii fo. 224 (payment to Thomas Fothergill, 21 Dec. 1646), SP 28/42/iv fo. 580 (payment to Francis Rishworth, 27 July 1646), SP 28/51/i fo. 111 (list of general officers, 10 Feb. 1648), SP 28/53/ii fo. 164 (pay warrant for Richard Morley, 17 Apr. 1648), SP 28/53/iii fos. 413, 430, 434, 436, and 463 (pay warrants for Walter Stephenson, 17 Apr. 1648, Henry Cleare snr, Richard Tompkins, and Thomas Symonds, 12 Apr. 1648, and Henry Cleare jnr, 24 Apr. 1648), SP 28/54/ii fo. 155 (certificate from Valentine Nickson, 12 Apr. 1648), SP 28/54/ii (pay warrant for Matthew Broad, 25 May 1648), SP 28/57/iv fo. 538 (quartering for Mr Simmes, 1646), SP 28/66/iii fo. 475 (payment to Arnold Sallenoza, 25 Mar. 1650), SP 28/67/iii fos. 404–22 (pay warrants for Bonham Spencer, Mr Croutch, Mr Bettris, Thomas Crutchley, William Dodd, Mr Knowles, Meredith Jones, Nathaniel Frankes, and Richard Hinges, 2 May 1650), SP 28/67/iv fos. 638–40 (pay warrants for Daniel Judd and Mr Higgs, 28 May 1650), SP 28/70/ii fo. 222 (pay warrant for Edward Cooke, 2 Aug. 1650), SP 28/70/iii fos. 585 and 589 (pay warrants for Daniel Pew/Pugh, 11 Sept. 1650, and Robert Rand, 11 Sept. 1650), SP 28/74/iv fo. 854 (pay warrant for Mr Walker, 22 Feb. 1651), SP 28/77/iv fos. 679–99 and 787 (pay warrants for Thomas Harding, Thomas Harvest, Humphrey Hughes, Henry Barnwell, John Hubbard, Walter Thompson, Isaac Smitheis/Smythes, Thomas Standford, John Payne, Thomas Lawrence, and Sandys Suter, 23 May 1651, and Robert Mustow, 30 May 1651); SP 28/124/ii fos. 316 and 383 (musters at Newcastle, 1648), SP 28/124/ii fo. 332 (list of officers who left Colonel Graves's regiment, 14 June 1648), SP 28/125/i fo. 15 (Tynemouth Castle garrison accounts), SP 28/125/ii fo. 197 (Tynemouth Castle garrison accounts), SP 28/126/i fos. 73v and 130v–131(Aylesbury garrison accounts, July 1646 to Dec. 1646); Gruber von Arni, Justice to the maimed soldier, p. 80; GL, MS 5265/1.
Sources: Green, Committee for compounding, ii, 1567, iii, pp. 2290–1; TNA, PROB 11/197 fos. 66v–67r (will of Edward Hales, 7 July 1646); J. Birch, Military memoir of Colonel John Birch, ed. T. Webb and J. Webb (London, 1873), p. 208; Atherton, ‘Royalist garrison of Lichfield Close’, pp. 82 and 86–7; Morris, ‘Molins, Edward’, ODNB; TNA, SP 28/143 fos. 20a and 66a; Wiseman, Severall chirurgicall treatises, passim; Gruber von Arni, Justice to the maimed soldier, pp. 23, 26, and 29; Willis Bund, ed., Diary of Henry Townshend, p. 153; Worton, ‘War effort in Shropshire’, p. 217; GL, MS 5265/1.
What of the education of the remainder? Taking the Eastern Association as an example, barber-surgeons’ companies have been found in Ipswich, Lincoln, Norwich, and St Albans.Footnote 84 Furthermore, large numbers of barber-surgeons existed in the sizeable corporate towns of King's Lynn, Colchester, and Great Yarmouth, which suggests that although surgeons did not have their own company, they may have been included in conglomerate companies with related crafts. This was certainly common practice in other parts of the country, such as the north-west.Footnote 85 Unfortunately, very few records for these companies survive.Footnote 86 The recording of one ‘Andreas Vanderlas’ as warden to the Norwich Barber-Surgeons’ Company in 1645 provides an intriguing hint that many of the surgeons of the Eastern Association, which was largely raised in the Eastern Counties, may have come through the ranks of East Anglian barber-surgeons’ companies.Footnote 87 Was this the same Andrew Vanderlash who was surgeon to Sir John Norwich's troop in the Eastern Association and paid out of the Norwich weekly assessment?Footnote 88
That said, Pelling discovered during her research into the Norwich barber-surgeons that large numbers lay outside the formal procedures of apprenticeship, freedom, and guild membership.Footnote 89 Masters could not enrol an apprentice into a company without paying ‘extortionate’ fees and many avoided this if possible, whilst the desire to enforce guild procedures varied with time.Footnote 90 Apprenticeships operating outside the auspices of municipal craft companies did not necessarily produce less-skilled surgeons. The Elizabethan military and naval surgeon William Clowes (father of Charles I's serjeant-surgeon), whose treatise on gunshot wounds A proved practice for all young surgeons became a standard work for the generation of Civil War surgeons, had not served a formal apprenticeship in a barber-surgeons’ company.Footnote 91 Clowes was not afraid to criticize ignorant surgeons and though he may have been biased because of his own experience, he claimed to know many surgeons who had no formal training but practised ‘honestly, carefully, painfully, and skilfully’.Footnote 92
III
It remains to consider how Civil War medical practitioners may have fared in practice. Many of the daily medical conditions that they would have encountered, such as ulcers, fractures, ‘fluxes of the belly’, dislocations, and even amputations, would have been common civilian complaints. However, Wiseman contended that ‘Wounds made by Gun-shot are the most complicate sort of Wounds that can be inflicted’, a notion with which John Woodall concurred.Footnote 93 Woodall, surgeon-general to the East India Company and a former military surgeon, recalled that when the privy council instructed the London Barber-Surgeons’ Company to impress surgeons experienced in curing gunshot wounds for the voyage to the Île de Ré, ‘by reason of that long and happy peace that our Nation had enioyed, many good Surgeons being put to it at the first, were likely to have been found somewhat to seek therein’. He thought the same could be said on the eve of the Civil Wars.Footnote 94
With war against Scotland looming in 1639, Woodall republished The surgeons mate. Like Clowes's treatise, Woodall's work was probably indispensable to Civil War surgeons. The royalist surgeon Thomas Brugis certainly admitted to following Woodall's methods.Footnote 95 The wide availability of continental literature in Britain prior to the Civil Wars is a well-known phenomenon to military historians.Footnote 96 Yet, Civil War medics too were well read in the medical works of leading continental military practitioners. The works of Wiseman and James Cooke (surgeon to the parliamentarian garrison at Warwick) incorporated the techniques of men like Hieronymus Fabricius, Ambroise Paré, and Johannes Scultetus.Footnote 97 The literature of the Military Revolution was not merely confined to drillbooks.
Some Civil War surgeons may have gained previous experience by enlisting in the English regiments serving in Protestant armies on the continent. No evidence of this has yet been traced, though some were fortunate enough to learn from those with prior military experience. For example, the younger Clowes had been apprenticed to his father, whilst Timothy Langley (staff surgeon to Essex's army from June 1644) had been apprenticed to Henry Boone, Woodall's pupil.Footnote 98 Several surgeons honed their skills by serving in the war against Scotland, including Loe and Langley.Footnote 99 The Civil Wars were themselves a learning experience. Henry Johnson, surgeon to the king's own troop of horse, took his apprentice William Gill with him on campaign in the Civil Wars, whilst many of the unnamed surgeons’ mates in pay warrants must also have been apprentices.Footnote 100
It was not just apprentices who learnt on the job. As Cook argued for the later seventeenth century, military service not only provided a training ground for medical practitioners but also reinforced the growing trend towards empirical, practical, ‘clinical’ medicine.Footnote 101 Military practitioners dealt with large numbers of men at once and thus had little time for the physic of learned physicians, which sought the causes of disease in the unique physiological conditions of each person's constitution. Instead, they sought specific cures for specific diseases, which led to uniformity in diagnosis and treatment.Footnote 102 Cook himself noted the involvement of Civil War practitioners such as John French in the new ‘chemical medicine’, whilst according to Stephen Rutherford, the writings of Civil War practitioners are examples of ‘evidence-based practice’. These men demonstrated good understandings of physiology, anatomy, antiseptics, infection control, and pharmacology, and embraced forward-thinking and scientific principles that enabled them to become ‘pioneers of medical practice’.Footnote 103 Men like the captain of a company of dragoons on whom Wiseman experimented with an innovative dressing survived who otherwise would have perished.Footnote 104
That said, even the most competent practitioners could do little in the face of the epidemics that ripped through soldiers’ quarters and paralysed armies.Footnote 105 Failure to treat disease undoubtedly had a severe impact on an army's capability, though military historians must be cautious of exaggerating its effects. As Malcolm Wanklyn argued, tactical contingency was also important. He pointed out that whilst the New Model Army was severely hit by the ‘New disease’ (probably typhus) during winter 1645, that army still outnumbered their opponents by a considerable margin but it took Sir Thomas Fairfax four months to force the surrender of the royalist army in the west and another two months to capture the major garrisons.Footnote 106
No doubt some surgeons were incompetent. Firth cited the case of Mr Fish, a former surgeon's mate who had been forced to resign to avoid court martial ‘for some miscarriages’ but was later appointed surgeon of the artillery in Scotland. Monck begged Cromwell to rescind Fish's commission, complaining that Fish was ‘unfit to take such an employ upon him’ because he was ‘never bound prentice to the profession’.Footnote 107 Yet, Monck's letter infers that there were plenty of other competent surgeons who could have been appointed in Fish's stead. Elsewhere, Holmes backed up his claim that ‘a number of chirurgeons were unqualified’ with an Indemnity Committee case in which James Bowman, surgeon to the earl of Manchester, was prosecuted by Eber Birch of Beverley for using physic as well as surgery.Footnote 108 However, although surgeons were theoretically confined to performing outward manual procedures, they had long assumed certain privileges in the practice of physic. This concerned physicians, who jealously guarded their right to administer internal medicine.Footnote 109 Woodall argued that in military contexts where a physician may not be available, it was ‘uncharitable to forbid an expert Surgeon at any time, or in any place, the use of the instruments and medicines which are necessary to his art, for the curing of his patients’.Footnote 110 It appears that Bowman was not so much unqualified as, like many others amongst the Indemnity papers, being prosecuted for the necessities of war.
Further investigation into the case of Edward Cooke is similarly revealing. Firth highlighted that Cooke had been accused of incompetence and neglect of his patients.Footnote 111 Cooke had served as surgeon-general to the army in Ireland but this case refers to the Flanders campaign conducted by the Protectorate in 1657–9.Footnote 112 Cooke had been sent to Dover to supervise the reception of casualties from Mardyke and Dunkirk but his efforts were hampered by the poor planning and lack of funding that surrounded the campaign.Footnote 113 Complaints arose about the standard of care in Dover and Cooke was forced to answer for it. In his defence, he appended a statement signed by thirty-one of his patients, who testified to his personal skill and care.Footnote 114 Moreover, forty wounded soldiers in Dover subsequently petitioned to be removed to London not due to neglect from Cooke and his army assistants, by whom they ‘bin Carefully and duely dressed’, but because they had been recently transferred to the care of local civilian surgeons, one of whom was ‘a public Drunkard’ and the other ‘stricken in yeares’.Footnote 115 The Dover debacle, coupled with criticisms from Wiseman of civilian surgeons, illustrates that civilian medics were used to supplement army practitioners to spread the workload in garrison towns, not, as Firth maintained, because the latter ‘were not remarkably skilful’.Footnote 116 This is not to deny that parliament dispatched leading London medics when senior officers were sick or wounded, such as when Skippon was wounded at Naseby, though the importance of that victory prompted parliament to ensure that regimental medics had the resources to deliver exemplary care to all the wounded.Footnote 117
IV
James Wheeler argued that prior to the Civil Wars, ‘while the English were abreast of many of the tactical and technological aspects of the continental Military Revolution, they had still failed to undertake the interrelated financial and administrative changes which were essential and integral long-term parts of that process’. It was not until the Civil Wars that these changes were implemented.Footnote 118 Wheeler's argument applies as much to frontline medical provision as to any other aspect of the Military Revolution. Many features of Civil War regimental medical provision had been trialled previously but it was not until that conflict (and through the implementation of the weekly assessments and the excise) that the continental military medical practices highlighted by Cook were implemented in Britain for any sustained period of time. If warfare drives medical advancement as the cliché suggests, then the experience of the Civil Wars is a reminder that progression is not based solely on the battlefield environment but also on the bureaucratic procedures that supported it. The raising of armies might provide many new opportunities for practitioners to improve their knowledge and treatment of military conditions, as well as develop new techniques in response to the challenges posed by the evolution of weaponry and engage in aspects of medicine beyond their strictly defined civilian roles (the practice of physic by surgeons, for example). However, such opportunities were more likely to have been taken up by practitioners if the promise of sufficient material compensation for their efforts was fulfilled.
That said, as Gavin Robinson maintained, during the Civil Wars resources were often contingent on political circumstances and the outcome of battles. Reliable tax revenues did not guarantee success and administrators had to work hard to make victory possible.Footnote 119 Parliament had constructed sustainable tax systems to support its armies in a long war by mid-1643 but in autumn 1644, it took the humiliating surrender at Lostwithiel to jolt parliament into supplying their surgeons. The recognition that resources were contingent on political circumstances explains why the evolution of British military medicine was a process of ebbs and flows, rather than teleological development. What the Glorious Revolution resolved, as Wheeler again argued, was the difficulties in government finance which stemmed from the conflict of political philosophies between the Stuarts and their parliaments that had re-emerged to plague English military operations at the Restoration.Footnote 120 This political shift no doubt had as profound implications for the administration of military medicine as the rest of military administration. Yet if a revolution may build upon previous advances, and its impact may not be fully realized until later, but it occurs where a paradigm shift takes place that qualitatively reshapes subsequent affairs, then it is in the Civil Wars that we must place the revolution in British military medicine.Footnote 121
By placing Civil War regimental medics in the context of what is known about seventeenth-century practitioners more generally, it seems that they differed little from their civilian colleagues, in terms of their education and training, whilst a medical career in the army was potentially a lucrative one. With this in mind, it is difficult to argue that the armies habitually enlisted substandard practitioners. No doubt some were more skilled than others but the wars provided an environment in which the innovative could flourish. Of the 580 parliamentarian wounded who received medical treatment in Northampton in the immediate aftermath of the battle of Naseby, only forty-six (7.93 per cent) were subsequently noted ‘mortuus est’.Footnote 122 Lack of comparable evidence from the beginning of the wars makes it difficult to determine how far the survivors had benefited from observation-based practice conducted over the years of sustained warfare but it does not seem unreasonable to suggest that this may have been the case. Moreover, as Rutherford pointed out, the numerous maimed soldiers who petitioned for financial relief from the state during the Civil War years had survived severe and often multiple injuries.Footnote 123 Some claimed relief as late as the 1700s, showing that they survived their injuries for decades afterwards.Footnote 124 Indeed, it is not known what happened to the soldier from the siege of Taunton with which this article opened but he was still alive a week later when Wiseman left him to move on with the rest of the army.Footnote 125