Julius Tiencken, New York
Julius Tiencken
was a minor Civil War instrument maker
Julius Tiencken, 1863-1872
Julius Tiencken
1863: 4 Astor place
1865: 142 Attorney
1871-72: h. IlO W. 29th
surgical instruments
Source: American Surgical
Instruments:American
Surgical Instruments:
An Illustrated History of their Manufacture and a Directory of Instrument
Makers to 1900 by James M. Edmonson, Ph.D., Curator, Dittrick Museum of
Medical History, Cleveland Medical Library Association and Case Western
Reserve University.
The following
information relates to which military surgical sets the major and minor
makers may have supplied.
Federal government purchased
sets during the Civil War:
There are two major groups of Federal
government contract-ordered military surgery sets used during the Civil War:
First, the Army Hospital Department,
was a subdivision of the Medical Department. From 1861 to 1865,
the
U. S. Army Hospital Department sets,
were specifically made for use during the Civil War. Yes,
there were a few Hospital Department marked sets which existed outside
the War years, but they are easily identified and dated by the contents.
(Note: There are U. S. A. Hosp. Dept. marked
sets used during the Mexican War of 1846, so
the trick is to correctly identify the maker and production dates.
The Army Medical Department before the Civil War was a small
bureaucracy, which consisted of less than 100 doctors, most of whom were
not performing surgery on a regular basis as there were no wars, so
there were not that many surgical sets needed.)
Secondly, there are
U. S. Army Medical Department sets, which were
used by Army surgeons before, during, and after the Civil War.
With Medical Dept. marked sets you have to figure out when the set was
made via the maker address or style of the case and instruments, but the
vast majority of these sets were purchased immediately before or during
the first year of the War. The Medical Department engraved sets
may have just been a matter of the small group of doctors in the pre-war
Medical Department ordering military surgical sets out of a different
military budget than the budget created to run the whole War effort and
assigned to the Hospital Department bureaucracy.
At the start of the Civil
War, the Army Medical Department consisted of one surgeon-general
(colonel), thirty surgeons (major) , and eighty-three assistants
(lieutenant). Three of these surgeons and twenty-one assistants resigned
"to go South," and three assistants were dismissed for disloyalty.
In August, 1861, ten additional surgeons and twenty assistants were
authorized, and a corps of medical cadets was formed, not to exceed
fifty in number, to be employed under the direction of medical officers
as dressers in hospital. (Refer to: 'THE
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT' By Major Charles Smart, Surgeon U. S. A. for
further details.)
A minor category of
'government', but not 'Federal', military sets are those purchased by
the state volunteer militias. These sets are
a minor source of military 'style' sets
purchased by various state voluntary militias existing prior to and
during the Civil War. These state groups, which were later
mustered into the Regular Army, could have ordered military-style sets
for their own use prior to or even during the War.
The instrument makers made sets for the state militia groups
before the War or during the first year before the Med. or Hosp. Dept.
purveyors ordered the 4,000 sets for the Federal Army.
This would account for the small number of military sets we see from
regional makers like Rees, Brinkerhoff, Goulding, Otto, Shurtleff, etc.
These regional makers could have provided military-style sets for their
local militia volunteers, but were never under contract to supply the
main-stream sets ordered and used by the Union Army during the War due
to their inability to supply the large numbers or quality of
instruments.
Remember, the vast majority of instrument makers in 1861, other than
someone like Tiemann, were not geared for large scale production, but
rather crafted individual hand-made instruments which were custom
ordered by the surgeon or put-up in cases for sale as a design by
'doctor so-and-so'. Other 'makers' imported instruments
from England and France to assemble sets as requested by a given doctor
or retail outlet such as a pharmacy or apothecary dealer.
It is
possible any given military group could have contracted with any given
instrument maker to provide a set of instruments for their group with
military latches and military dedicated instruments. The markings or
lack there-of on the brass plates or instruments would be the telling point.
Only the official Union ordered sets would be engraved and marked as U.S.A.
Hosp. Dept or Medical Dept. All others would be either unmarked or
otherwise marked depending on the owner. This may account for some
un-marked or inconsistently marked brass plates on military 'style'
sets during or prior to the War years.
See: Identify
Civil War era sets.
Also, there are several resources on this site to help you identify the
earliest sets used during the War via the
1861 Army Supply Table.
State Volunteer
Militia Surgeons:
Before the War
started, there were state militias and each militia had 'medical' staff of
some sort. Unfortunately the state militias did not necessarily
qualify their medical officers and some if not many were simply medical
wannabes: druggists, preceptors, and individuals who 'attended' a medical
lecture or two. Yes, some were qualified surgeons as the literature
proves, but there were qualifying boards which vetted these individuals
before they were allowed to be designated as military surgeons in the Union
Army and most likely by the Confederate medical staff. The boards who
qualified these doctors as surgeons were often staffed by teaching faculty
at leading medical colleges. Among the famous surgeons and faculty who
performed this vetting service were:
Alexander Mott,
M.D. and
Joseph
Janvier Woodward, M.D.
See a discussion
of the
State Volunteer Militia,
by Major Charles Smart, Surgeon
U. S. A.
There are
surgical sets, military and civilian issue (as previously discussed), which
were provided to and/or owned by surgeons who were part of State Volunteer
Regiments or some division, and who may have brought their own surgical sets
when they were mustered into the Regular Army. As mentioned above,
these sets would not be marked for the U.S.A. Hospital Department because
the sets were provided to or owned by a state militia or surgeon and not by
the Federal Government. Of course it would be difficult to prove
unequivocally if a given set belonged to the surgeon unless engraved or
heavily documented. This is a very difficult area to prove or
disprove. But there are two or three sets in this collection in this
category. See a
Tiemann military set, which belonged to
Norman Smith, M.D. with the
6th. Mass. Volunteers.
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