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Page 11 text:
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' W MEDICAI, L9I l ICIiI25 'l'I2AlNINfi7 QAIVII3 A V W W Q1010330ioioioioioQd:oLoonDoiuioioioioioQingxiodiwioii I-'Ol2'1' l21l.lf.Y, IOXNSAS .444 A 4. 4 ' ILLIAM N. Bispham was born May 22nd, 1875,at Warenton, Virginia. He was educated in the public schools of Baltimore and the Baltimore City College, Balt'more, Maryland. Later he attended the University of Maryland and was graduated from there in 1897, receiving the degree of Doctor of Medicine. For some , time previous he had been a member of the Fifth Regiment, Maryland National Guard. He entered the Service of the United States on April 22nd, 1898. During the Spanish-American War, Lieutenant Bispham had service at Chickamauga Park, Georgia, Tampa, Florida and Huntsville, Alabama. All of this service at that time was as Assistant Regimental Surgeon. In December, 1898, he went to Cuba with the Eighth U. S. Infantry as Assistant Surgeon. This regiment on disembarking at Havana, Cuba, was camped at first at Buena Vista, about seven miles west of the city. On the surrender of the city of Havana to the American Troops on January lst, 1899, this regiment was brought into the city and became a part of the acting police force of the city. Lieutenant Bispham was on duty in Havana with this regiment and in February, '99, was placed on duty as assistant to the officer in charge of Cuban Relief-who was the now Major General Greble. Later in the same year he was put on special duty with the Headquarters Department of Havana. In April, 1899, he was placed in charge of the yellow fever preventive work carried out with the troops quartered in the city of Havana. In july, 1899, he was detailed as inspector in the Department of Charities and Hospitals in the city of Havana under Surgeon Ross of the U. S. Navy retired. His duties in this detail were principally the inspection of the hospitals and several charitable institutions in the city of Havana. In january, 1900, he was detailed as Assistant to the Chief Sanitary Officer of Havana under General W. C Gorgas. He continued in that detail until June of that year when he was ordered to Cabana Barracks, Cuba, where he remained as Assistant Surgeon and Surgeon of that station until December of that year, when he was ordered to Columbia Barracks, Cuba, as Assistant Surgeon. He remained there until February, 1901, when he returned to Cabana Barracks as the Surgeon of that station. In April, 1902, he returned to the United States and was detailed as Assistant Surgeon at Fort Totten, Long Island, which had only recently been established as the Torpedo School for the Coast Artillery. He remained there until November of the same year, when he was ordered to Fort McHenry, Maryland, as the Surgeon of that station. While there he took a special course in clinical medicine under Doctor Charles E. Simon. In December, 1903, he was ordered to Fort Logan, Colorado, and remained there as Assistant Surgeon until February, 1907. During that time he attended the maneuvers held on the Pole Mountain Reservation in Wyoming and there commanded Field Hospital No. 4. He also served temporarily as Surgeon at Fort D. A. Russell, Wyoming, for two months in 1906. In March, 1907, he went to the Phillippine Islands and served successively as Surgeon at Camp Connell, Samar, Borongan, Samar, and Warwick Barracks, Cebu, returning to the United States in 1909 when he was detailed as Surgeon for the Military Prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. While on this detail he attended the first session of the Field Service School for Medical Officers at Fort Leavenworth. In 1912, he was detailed as Director of the Field Service School for Medi- cal Officers at Fort Leavenworth, succeeding Colonel E. L. Munson-who was the first incumbent of that position. In 1915, he was detailed for duty with troops on the Mexican Border and reported at Texas City, Texas, in August of that year. He was assigned to duty with the 28th Infantry, then camped in Galveston. From there he went to Mission Texas, with the 28th Infantry in October of the same year and served as the Surgeon of the 2nd Infantry Patrol District, In june, 1916, he was detailed as District Surgeon of the Brownville District with heaclquarrers at Brownsville, Texasl In july, 1916, he was detailed as General Sanitary Inspector, covering that part of the Border from Laredo to Browns- ville. Included in this district was the New York Division, the llth Provisional Division and troops in and about the city of Brownsville. In August of the same year, he was sent as General Sanitary Inspector for the Western Texas Dis- trict extending from Laredo to El Paso, with headquarters at Eagle Pass. The troops in this district consisted of a divi- sion at Eagle Pass and several separate brigades guarding the Texas Border. In February, 1917, he was ordered to Chicago, Illinois, as Lecturer on Military Hygiene and Army Administration at the University of Chicago, the University of Illinois, Northwestern University, the Chicago College of Medicine, Loyola University and the Hahnemann School of Medicine. In May, 1917, he was ordered to Fort Sheridan, Illinois, as Surgeon for the Reserve Officers Training Camp esrab- shed at that Post. ln the same month, he was relieved from duty at that station and was ordered to Fort Riley Kansas as the Commandant of the Medical Officers Training Camp estalished, at this place. ' ' He is a member of the Association of Military Surgeons and a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, ' tiioioioiOioiOioaioioeuuoloioloivoaunnensoauswwb . I'1J Vf?'l.N- ' ll
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Page 10 text:
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yi A --X - Y . , . .. .V -. . ' -. v v,,f .-,..g...illiiZl..':i:f?l.f, Qig.ii.l.255N'5-..l.W?t,l,IlllHi.:s.l1!3Nll cultivarUIIIIINWIOO'ISD''JUDOllwllw'www0nllwnnmmoolmvwdlliwnillvsqunomzuwwfmluvoluanodqnoxuwommlvnilioqllvniamlb! l Ui. i I-'ll VY I-QANSAH ,,, X . structed in epidemiology, the handling of 'evacuation hospitals, hospital trains, evacuation ambulance companies and all other units of a special character with a division and also along the lines of communi- cation. ' In November it was decided that the professional instruction of officers of the Medical Department would be better carried out at these camps, and, acting upon this decision, schools for the intensive instruction in Orthopedics, X-Ray, Surgery, and Internal Medicine were inaugurated. At the present time this instruction is of extreme importance: its expansion is noted daily. In addition to the instruc- tion of the officers in special lines, it was also found necessary to give special instruction to the enlisted men, therefore, not only thoroughly training them in the duties of the soldier, per se, but also these men are receiving instruction in the duties of clerks, chauffeurs, automobile mechanics, drivers, nurses, cooks and all other special details for which enlisted men of the Medical Department are available. In a summary of this character, attention should be called to the fact that on the expansion of this camp to its full capacity, and by the relief of five of our regular officers who were instructors in lthe early days of the camp, the major portion of the instruction came upon the shoulders of the Reserve OfHcers. Most of these officers knew nothing of army service except in an academic way before june lst, 1917, and it is with a great deal of pleasure that the statement can be made that these officers hagze acquitted themselves in a most thorough manner and that their instruction has been of the highest or er. In conclusion, it must be stated that both ofhcers and enlisted men who have been on duty at this camp have shown the greatest desire to learn their duties and also to become as thoroughly instructed as the time of training would permit. All officers and men sent from this camp for detail elsewhere have given excellent service, and it has been recognized by those in authority that these men were not only well grounded in the principles of sanitary service, but also carried with them an esprit and desire to give their full ability and services to their country. qmlmn.-Q-. -WQQWQHUWHQQQDDQOQCQOHQQ mvu qgq 1 . 10 , A
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Page 12 text:
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MLDICAI- oi4Hcf1rzs1i2A1NirgQ,QAMrJ A 4A , i eininsnnoiocnioiioiioQSoiiioioioiougoiiocnoioioioioioioilioio ' FORT RILEY, KANSAS Ebc Cbject of the mcbical Eraining Clamp im I-IEN, in the spring of 1917, the United States decided to cast its lot, for the sake of humanit , with the v wa -fm v . . Y . gf21T'bQg Allied Forces strug ling against the tyrannies of Prussianism, this countr was almost totally unprepared g ' y ' f Q 2,24 1 to render any great assistance beyond furnishing of funds and supplies to replace the waning stores of its allies. Our man-power, although theoretically enormous, was, as far as immediate usefulness is con- if ,335 tl cerned almost to be disregarded. It became evident, at once, that measures must be taken to classify and w fi -call into the military service of the country such able-'bodied males as were not essential to the various gl -I . . economic and industrial pursuits of the country, in order to furnish ourselves with a fighting force , sufficient properly to render assistance in replacing the already greatly depleted military forces of our allies. This consideration, as is well-known, lead to the Selective Service Act of May, 1917. While, in time of war, a large fighting force is indispensable, yet it is of prime importance that a sufficient number of properly trained and experienced officers be available. From such a small military organization as existed at the time of our entry into the war, we could expect to obtain only a mere handful of trained officers, far too few to lead and command tne vast hoards of untrained men to be called into active service. For this reason Officers Training Camps were es- tablished in variousparts of the country to which selected men of good physical and mental qualifications were sent for a course of intensive military training under specially trained instructors from our regular military organization. This idea of training o?i:ers for military service is, of course, not new as the Military Academy at West Point and the Naval Academy at Annapolis have been carrying out this procedure for many years. However, the number of men available for such duty has always been small, as compared with the vast number needed during the present emergency. It is true that a few training camps, such as that at Plattsburrg, have been conducted with this end in view, but nothing like a general concerted plan had been attempted prior to this time. lWith the Medical Department, however, little had been done in the way of training civilian physicians in the duties and functions of the military organizations, beyond an occasional training course of two weeks at a camp, to which vol- unteers from the Medical Reserve Corps might report for duty, and the attempt to interest the members of the Medical Reserve Corps in the Correspondence Course for Officers of the M.R.C. at Fort Leavenworth. For this reason Medical Training Camps were established at Fort Riley, Kansas, Fort Ogelthorpe,,Georgia, and Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana, the idea of such general training camps for officers of the Medical Department being entirely new. It is surprising that this plan was not adopted sooner, in view'of the lessons of the Spanish-American War, but the reason may probably be found in the misconceptions of the functions of the Medical Department, as held by the public in general as well as by the medical profession at large and even by the line of the Army. It is no doubt true that the true function and importance of the Medical Department were not appreciated until the Russo-japanese War, which was the first great war in which the deaths from wounds exceeded those from disease in- curred in camps and in consequen e of unsanitary conditions. It is, perhaps, unnecessary to point out that the duties of a medical officer are, first, administsative and advisory, second, those dealing with sanitary problems, and lastly those of a purely professional nature. While, of course, the medical officer deals with the sick and wounded, yet his primary duties i01l1OlO1OlOi,O1OlClillllili Cl 12 . '
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