American Civil War Medical & Surgical Antiques

(A Private Collection - Research and Identification Project)

Civil War Era Surgical Sets, Surgeon's Swords & Images

Civil War Surgeon Education & Civil War Medicine Text-books

Established 1995      .   .   .     Dr. Michael Echols

As seen in: Military Images Magazine, American's Civil War Magazine, Warman's Civil War Collectibles, Antique Week, Northeast Antiques, Civil War Army Swords, Civil War Times Illustrated, various TV programs, Antiques & Collecting publications

 

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Bone Forceps:

A comparison of 1829 to 1886 and Civil War Forceps

by Dr. Michael Echols

This article is a survey of 40 plus sets in this collection ranging from 1820's to 1886 to demonstrate the various forms and designs of bone forceps.  The various photos can be used to determine the approximate age of unknown forceps and to illustrate the changes in design through the 1800's.  Unfortunately, bone forceps are the most often missing item in surgery set.  I suspect that is due to the usefulness of the cutting forceps for a wide range of materials and thus their removal by someone other than a doctor.  The same can be said for scissors.

Remember, these instruments were custom fit to the cases and should fit precisely to the velvet lined slots.  The form of the head and type of handles of the forceps can be very helpful in determining the era or maker.  Most heavy duty forceps are imprinted with the maker name and city.  NONE of these instruments are stainless steel or chrome plated because those processes did not exist until post 1880's.   If you  see flaked chrome plating...it's post-1880 to be sure.

Tiemann 1880's catalog

See similar articles on dating tourniquets, saws, bone forceps, forceps, or amputation knives.

Click on images (from this collection surgical sets) to enlarge

c. 1829 Rose bone forceps
c. 1840 J. H. Gemrig bone forceps
c. 1850 M. Wocher bone forceps
c. 1846 Goulding U. S. Army Hospital Dept. bone forceps
c. 1850 Martin bone forceps (top) and muscle retractor
c. 1850 Geo. Tiemann bone forceps (top)
c. 1850's J. H. Gemrig bone forceps.  Satterlee's design, typically used in the early years of the Civil War.
c. 1855 J. Teufel bone forceps
c. 1863 Wade and Ford bone forceps from a civilian issue set, typically used later during the Civil War and into the late1870's
c. 1861-64 Tiemann U. S. Army Hospital Department Civil War issue bone forceps which are in a field surgery set.
c. 1861-64 Kolbe' U. S. Army Hospital Department  Civil War issue bone forceps which are in a bone resection set for hospital use.

These are standard issue for the Hospital Department to their specifications.

c. 1865 Hernstein, U. S. Army Hospital Department Civil War issue bone forceps which are in a bone resection set.

These are prime examples of the type and design of  bone forceps one could expect in Hospital Department sets from the Civil War era.  They may vary by maker, but the design is similar due to the Hospital Department specifying what they wanted in a given set for hospital use.

c. 1861-64 Hernstein, U. S. Army Hospital Department Civil War issue bone forceps from a small field set.
c. 1868 Gemrig bone forceps and metacarpel saw
c. 1870's Shepard and Dudley, and post Civil War as Shepard and Dudley never made instruments marked with their name during the Civil War
c. 1870 Gemrig bone forceps from a resection set
c. 1860's J. H. Gemrig bone forceps
c. 1870's Kern bone foreceps
c. 1870's Aloe & Hernstein bone forceps
c. 1880 Gemrig bone forceps
c. 1880's Sharp & Smith bone forceps and a director (top)
c. 1886 Helmond bone forceps

Below: Civil War bone forceps, early and later examples

1860's Gemrig

Later and larger Liston style bone forceps

mvc-239s.jpg (22382 bytes)

1850's Gemrig

Earlier and smaller Satterlee's bone forceps

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Medical Collections          

Direct links to all medical & Civil War collections on this site

American Surgical Sets:        Pre-1861:  1 | 2    -    Civil War:  4 | 5 | 6 | 7     -    Post-1865:  3 

Medical Text-Books:

1 | 1a | 2 | 2a | 3 | 3a | 4 | 4a | 5 | 5a | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 9a | 10 | 11 | 12

Medical Lecture Cards:

1 | 2 | 34 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20

Surgeon CDV Images:

1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7

Medical Staff Swords:

1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17

Hosp Dept Bottles & Tins:

1 | 2 | 3 |

 

Currently Seeking to Purchase for this Collection

Partial or Incomplete surgical sets or instruments by:  Snowden, Tiemann, Gemrig, Kolbe', Hernstein

 Any medical instrument or book marked:   U.S.A. / Hosp. Dep't.  or  U.S.A. / Med. Department

Medical Antiques Wanted List                             Contact Dr. Michael Echols

American Civil War Medical & Surgical Antiques

This site is an active on-going collection and research project.  Additions are actively being sought.  Information and evaluations on pre-1865 material are gladly provided to individuals, universities, authors, archivists, museums, libraries, auction houses, antique dealers, and researchers. 

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All content 'by Dr. Echols' and all original photography on this Web Site is copyrighted 1995 - 2010 and may not be used on any other web site or in print without the expressed e-mail permission from Dr. Echols:  Contact   All rights reserved.  Please note, information on this site may not be normally referenced as this is an active research project and content may not yet be properly cited for publication. 

("Braceface" is a term kids apply to other kids who wear braces.  Dr. Echols is a retired orthodontist)

 

Last update: Friday, March 12, 2010