Read The Montana Doctor's Bride (New Brides of Montana) Online
Authors: Susan Leigh Carlton
New Brides of Montana Series
Carter
Palmer was a young doctor fresh out of Georgetown University Medical School in Georgetown and a resident program less than two years when the Civil War broke out in 1861. He decided the Army of the Potomac, a division of the Union Army would offer him more experience in the expected short duration of the war than he would gain in several years of civilian practice. He left his new, young bride in Rockville and went off to war. He was proven right in one respect, he did gain an extensive amount of surgical experience in a very short time. The war was not over in the expected short time frame, however. It lasted four bloody, horrific years and he was there for all of it.
One thing kept him going those four years… the thought of returning to Rockville, Maryland and his beloved Lucy. He had not known when he would arrive, so he was not surprised when she was not at the station to greet him when he got off the train. He made his way to their home on Shady Grove Road, where he found a yard overgrown with weeds, the paint on the exterior peeling, and a musty smell inside. There was no sign of the house having been occupied in quite some time.
He went next door to ask Elizabeth Cartwright, Lucy’s best friend, if she knew where Lucy was. When Elizabeth told him Lucy had died more than a year previously from small pox, he was devastated. Elizabeth told him there had been no way to notify him since the Army had listed him as killed in action.
He could not get past the loss of Lucy, coupled with the haunting memories of the many men who had died on his operating table. It was too much at once. He decided he had to get far away from Rockville. Helena, Montana was chosen as his refuge.
He kept corresponding with Elizabeth after his arrival in Helena. After he found himself working as a contract surgeon for the Cavalry in a campaign called Red Cloud’s War, he found he was lonelier than before, and that he missed Elizabeth. He asked her to come to Montana and marry him. She rejected his proposal. Twice. Read on to discover the astonishing reason behind the rejection…
April 8, 1865, Appomattox Station, Virginia…
With his white smock covered with blood from a series of amputations, Dr. Carter Palmer, a regimental surgeon in the Union Army of the Potomac stepped outside the surgical tent serving as a field hospital. From a pocket in his smock, he retrieved what had been a white handkerchief and wiped his forehead.
“I have seen enough blood today, to last a lifetime,” he told his assistant, Percival Smythe. “This war against fellow Americans needs to end, while some of us are left alive. We are a crippled nation, and vulnerable to anyone for the taking.”
Carter’s wish came true; General Robert E. Lee surrendered at Appomattox Courthouse the next day. It was over. Jubilation reigned. “Now, I can go home to Lucy,” the good doctor said.
It took three weeks for him to reach the point in his patient’s care where he could be released from the Army and to make his way back to Rockville and his beloved Lucy.
His joy was short-lived when he learned of the tragedies of home.
The band, consist
ing of old men, was playing enthusiastically, if not very well, when the train pulled into the station in Rockville, Maryland.
The crowd cheered when the passengers, most of whom were soldiers, began disembarking from the train. Pushing his way through the crowd, he searched for the one face he wanted to see. It was not there. He was not overly surprised, since he hadn’t had any idea about his arrival time or date, when he wrote the last letter from Virginia. He had no doubt as to the shambles of the American postal system.
He hurried to his home on Shady Grove Road. He had not been home in over two years and was dismayed to see the condition of the white, colonial home. The paint was peeling, weeds had over run the yard. The gate in the white picket fence sagged open. He went up the steps and onto the unswept front porch. He knocked, not wanting to startle Lucy when he walked in.
The musty smell of the living room caused his concern to grow. This was not like Lucy. She was a meticulous housekeeper. “Lucy, it’s me. I’m finally home,” he called out. He walked from room to room, finding the same stale smell in each room. There was no sign of recent occupancy. Lucy was not here.
Alarmed now, he left the house and went next-door, home of Lucy’s best friend, Elizabeth Cartwright. It was answered by a face he recognized as Elizabeth. Her face paled when she recognized him. She looked as if she might faint, and he reached out and steadied her, and led her to a chair. “Carter, we thought you were dead. Your name was listed on the casualty list at the depot as having been killed last year.”
“Obviously, the reports of my death were exaggerated,” he said lightly. “Do you know where Lucy is?” he asked.
Her eyes filled with tears, Elizabeth said, “It was small pox, Carter. Even President Lincoln had it. The Army had you listed as dead. If I had known, I would have kept trying to get word to you.
“She only lasted three weeks. I tried to take care of her, but after the blisters came, she was quarantined. I was there, Carter, she did not die alone. We buried her in Forest Oak Cemetery, where her parents are.”
He asked her about her husband, “What about Caleb, Elizabeth. Did he survive?”
“No, he was killed at Spotsylvania,” she answered. “They said it was the longest list ever posted at the depot. Thank God, it is over. We lost so many. Almost an entire generation wiped out.”
“I apologize for opening old wounds, Elizabeth. I should have waited for you to tell me. It was callous on my part. I waited so long to get home and now there’s nothing for me there” he said.
“What are you going to do? Will you be setting up an office? There’s plenty of space waiting for you,” she said.
“After all I’ve seen, and experienced, I don’t know whether I want to go back to doctoring or not. For now, I think I’m just going to rest. Then I’ll clean up the place. Maybe sell it, I don’t know. I’m in shock from all you told me.”
“I’m sorry, Carter, I tried to…”
“I know. You did all you could, and I appreciate it. I’m glad you were there to comfort her. Lucy always thought of you as her dearest friend. Thank you again for what you did.”
He stood, and then nodded. “I’m going home now.”
Dr. Carter Palmer sat in the musty living room of his house pondering his options. He loved the practice of medicine. His dream became a reality when he graduated from Georgetown in 1859, at the age of twenty-two, after receiving his degree, he spent an apprenticeship in the Washington Infirmary, one of the first hospitals in the nation’s capital.
When the war broke out in 1861, he was eager to serve, rightly deciding it would be the best place to hone his craft. He discovered there were stringent requirements to meet before he could become a doctor in the Union Army.
The Army Medical Board required all surgeons to pass an oral and written test to determine their competence in the medical sciences as well as history, geography, literature, philosophy and languages. After a high rate of failure from these examinations, the Secretary of War lowered the requirements significantly. Because of this, the number of competent surgeons rivaled the incompetent, and many of those that served had an alarmingly disparate base of knowledge to wit: There were Army surgeons who lacked the latest knowledge of medical theory and technology, and civilian volunteers that were lacking surgical experience. Charges of needless operations performed to perfect surgical skills were made. If a patient’s wound proved uninteresting, they might be abandoned. There were charges of surgeons operating while intoxicated. Eventually, procedures put in place by the Surgeon General of the United States eliminated most of these situations.
F
Therefore, Dr. Carter Palmer, degree in hand, decided the Army Medical Corp was a place he would be able to gain experience unrivaled in any office, or civilian infirmary. He passed the requirements easily, and was admitted into the practice of military medicine. He was not one of those called a “butcher”, a name commonly applied to Army doctors.
Airing out…
April is a special time of the year in Rockville, with cool nights and mild days. The trees begin to bud, birds sing in anticipation of the coming day. Carter opened all of the windows to rid the house of the stale, musty air. Linens that had been packed away were fresh and put to use, while those that had been out, were washed, and hung on the line in back to dry. He chose to do the work himself rather than hire help.
He laid in a supply of wood, brought food from the general store. He was not an accomplished cook, but after the years of army rations, the food he prepared was palatable. At least. It was to him. Elizabeth invited him to dinner on occasion, but he declined most of the invitations. Too many memories of Lucy were recalled when he was around her, causing him much pain.
He visited the Forest Oak Cemetery gravesite on a weekly basis, each time taking fresh flowers, and keeping it weed free. He commissioned a stonecutter to erect a headstone to mark her final resting place. He would sit for hours by the headstone, talking to Lucy, asking her advice and help in deciding what to do with the rest of his life. Only he knew whether she answered him or not, but he came to a decision.
“Elizabeth, I want to take care of the burial expenses when Lucy died. Who made the arrangements?”
“I made all of the arrangements with the undertaker. Since you were thought to be dead, he refused to take any money from me,” she said.
“I will take care of it then. He needs to be paid for his services,” Carter said.
“I’m sure he doesn’t expect to be, but it is a good and right thing to do,” she said.
“I’ll take care of it today.”
During his service, he dutifully sent his army pay home, most of which was banked by Lucy in the First National Bank of Rockville. Elizabeth had collected all of the mail after Lucy’s death, and it remained unopened. Many of the envelopes contained his military pay. Carter visited the bank after his third week home to inquire on the status of his account with the bank, and to deposit his pay as well.
The president of the bank, John Hackett, had a small office near the door, and it was here Carter found him. He was unknown to Carter, since he came to the bank after Carter had left for the war. After identifying himself to the banker, and asking for the status of his account, the banker produced a ledger page for the account. The meticulous penmanship revealed a sizable balance, surprising the doctor.
“I am in the process of deciding whether I will establish my practice here in Rockville or elsewhere. In the event, I decide I want to go elsewhere, could the bank handle the renting of my house and the subsequent disposition?” he asked.
“Yes, of course, we would be happy to handle that for you. Actually, the bank’s fee for that would be a small percentage of the proceeds. When would you be making that decision?” the banker asked.
“As I said, I am in the process of deciding now. I will inform you as soon as the decision is made.”