William Thompson Lusk (May 23, 1838 – June
12, 1897) was an American
obstetrician
and a soldier who rose to the rank of Assistant
Adjutant-General in the
United States Volunteers
during the first three years of the
American Civil War. After he retired from
the Union Army, he finished his medical education and became a
professor as well as a president of the
Bellevue Hospital Medical
College. He received much recognition and fame for his 1882
book,
The Science
and Art of Midwifery, which quickly became a widely
referenced text.
Early life
Lusk was
born and raised in Norwich, Connecticut
. Lusk, the fifth generation of his family,
was the son of Sylvester Graham Lusk and Elizabeth Freeman Lusk
(
née Adams). Lusk attended a school run by local Reverend
Albert Spooner in preparation for attending Yale College. However,
his uncle believed that learning the old version of grammar from
Spooner would get Lusk rejected from Yale, and for the winter of
1853–1854, he attended Anthon's Grammar School at Murray Street,
New York City.
For the winter of 1854–1855, Lusk was sent by
his mother to Russell's Military School in New Haven,
Connecticut
to gain physical toughness through
gymnastics.
Studies and wartime
In 1855,
he enrolled at Yale
University
in the class
of 1859, but left school at the end of his freshman year and
studied medicine in Berlin
and Heidelberg
from 1858 to 1861. When the
American Civil War broke out, he joined
the Second New York Volunteers regiment. He moved through the ranks
from
Private to Assistant
Adjutant General by 1863.
Unusually for his time, Lusk did not practice the usual custom of
vilifying of the
Southern soldiers; his letters
actually indicate that he respected the Southerners and spoke of
"
Yankee hordes" invading the Southerners'
"splendid
plantations". He was promoted
to
Captain in February 24, 1862
(retroactive to January 19, 1862), and resigned from the United
States Volunteers on February 28, 1863, with the intention of going
back to New York to take command of a regiment. He was instead
appointed Assistant Adjutant-General (with a rank of Captain) and
assigned to the staff of
Daniel Tyler
on June 26, 1863, but resigned just two months later on September
17, 1863, after his troops were sent to Delaware and marked as
inactive.
Returning to
Bellevue
Hospital Medical College, he finished medical school and
received his
M.D. in 1864. He was
the valedictorian of his graduating class.
Lusk took part in
engagements at Blackburn's Ford
, First Bull Run
, Port Royal
, James
Island, Second Bull Run
, Antietam
, Fredericksburg
, and many other minor battles. He was also a
staff officer of
Issac I. Stevens until Stevens' death, and he
commanded two companies during the
Draft Riots of 1863.
On October 5, 1886, Lusk joined New York Commandery of the
Loyal
Legion of the United States. He also joined George Washington
Post, No. 103, Dept. New York,
Grand Army of the Republic on
March 17, 1887.
After war

A portrait of William Thompson
Lusk
Personal life
Lusk married Mary H. Chittenden, on May 4, 1864, after he finished
medical school. After that he spent one year in Europe studying
under various medical professionals, though his
New York Times obituary lists this time period as having lasted 4
years.
He
studied in Edinburgh
with James
Y. Simpson, in
Vienna
with Carl
Braun, and then in Prague
with
Seifert. Lusk came back to New York in 1868 to establish his
practice. In 1871 his wife died, and he was left with two sons and
two daughters.
Chittenden Memorial Library at Yale University
was built in his wife's honor. Five years
later, Lusk married Matilda Thore (
née Myer), with whom he
had one daughter. Maltida died in 1892.
Professorships and Awards
On his return from Europe, Lusk was appointed Professor of
Physiology at Long Island College Hospital.
In the winter of 1871,
upon invitation of Oliver
Wendell Holmes, Sr., Lusk moved to Boston to lecture on
physiology at Harvard Medical School
. Lusk was Professor of Obstetrics and
Gynecology at Bellevue Hospital Medical College until his death
after the previous seatholder, Dr. George T. Elliot, died. At the
same time as accepting the professorship, he also became co-editor
of
The Medical Journal, and held that position from 1871
to 1873, and also became a visiting physician at Bellevue Hospital.
Just a few hours later, Harvard offered him a position, which he
declined.
In 1890, upon the hospital's consolidation
with New York
University
Medical College, Lusk became President of Bellevue
Hospital Medical College
Lusk also received many other scientific awards and distinctions.
These include:
- One of the founders of the State's and County's Medical
Associations (1884)
- A significant president of the State's Medical Association
(1889)
- Honorary fellow of the Obstetrical Society of London
- President of Faculty and Professor of Obstetrics and of the
Diseases of Women and Children at Bellevue Medical College
- Consulting Physician to Bellevue Maternity Hospital (1870),
Foundling Asylum, Emergency Hospital
- Gynecologist to the Bellevue and St. Vincent Hospitals
- Honorary Fellow of the Edinburgh and London Obstetrical
Societies
- Corresponding Fellow of the Obstetrical Societies of Paris and
Leipsic and Paris Academy of Medicine
- President of the American Gynecological Society
- President of the New York State Medical Association
- Vice-President of the New York Obstetrical Society (1873)
- President of the New York Obstetrical Society (1879)
- Honorary degree of LL.D. from Yale University (1884)
Medical work
Lusk wrote many medical papers, including his 1876 paper,
Nature, Causes and Prevention of Puerperal Fever, which
was one of the first papers to come out in support of
germ theory. In 1882, he published
The Science and Art of
Midwifery. The book achieved great sales in America and
England, and was translated into many languages, including French,
Italian, Spanish, Arabic.. It went through four editions, the last
of which was practically a rewrite. Lusk was either planning to or
in the process of writing a fifth edition when he died.
Lusk was also one of the first physicians to successfully perform a
Caesarean section. In March 1887,
Lusk performed the second Caesarian section in the United States
where both the mother and child survived. By sometime in 1888, he
had already performed three fully successful Caesarian sections
within the past year. Lusk was also a recognized authority on
gynecology.
Death
Lusk died, very suddenly and unexpectedly, of
apoplexy. He was survived by five children; two
sons and two daughters from his first marriage and a daughter from
his second. According to his obituary in the New York Times, he
left a fortune of over three million dollars to his estate. At the
time of his death, his eldest son was a Yale professor, and his
younger son had just graduated from Yale in 1890.
References
Bibliography
-
- Pages 9–12 by Edward Haight, Andrew D. Braid, Robert Gair, a
committee on behalf of the New York Commandery of the Loyal Legion
of the United States
- Pages 13–20 by Dr. A. Alexander Smith
- Pages 21–24 by Austin Flint, M.D.
- Pages 25–31 by Henry C. Coe, M.D.