SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — The first doctor to reach President Abraham Lincoln
after he was shot in a Washington theater rushed to his ceremonial box
and found him paralyzed, comatose and leaning against his wife. Dr. Charles Leale ordered brandy and water to be brought immediately.
Leale's long-lost report of
efforts to help the mortally wounded president, written just hours after
his death, was discovered in a box at the National Archives late last
month.
The Army surgeon, who sat 40 feet
from Lincoln at Ford's Theater that night in April 1865, saw assassin
John Wilkes Booth jump to the stage, brandishing a dagger. Thinking
Lincoln had been stabbed, Leale pushed his way to the victim but found a
different injury.
"I commenced to examine his head
(as no wound near the shoulder was found) and soon passed my fingers
over a large firm clot of blood situated about one inch below the
superior curved line of the occipital bone," Leale reported. "The
coagula I easily removed and passed the little finger of my left hand
through the perfectly smooth opening made by the ball."
The historians who discovered the
report believe it was filed, packed in a box, stored at the archives
and not seen for 147 years. While it doesn't add much new information,
"it's the first draft" of the tragedy, said Daniel Stowell, director of
the Papers of Abraham Lincoln.
"What's fascinating about this report is its immediacy and its
clinical, just-the-facts approach," Stowell said. "There's not a lot of
flowery language, not a lot of emotion."
A researcher for the Papers of
Abraham Lincoln, Helena Iles Papaioannou, found the report among the
U.S. surgeon general's April 1865 correspondence, filed under "L'' for
Leale.
Physicians continue to debate
whether Lincoln received proper treatment. With trauma treatment still
in its infancy, Leale's report illustrates "the helplessness of the
doctors," Stowell said. "He doesn't say that but you can feel it."
"For his time, he did everything
right," said Dr. Blaine Houmes, a Cedar Rapids, Iowa, specialist in
emergency medicine who has studied the assassination. Accounts vary
about how Leale did it — Houmes thinks he might have pounded on the
victim's chest — but the doctor resuscitated the president.
"When Dr. Leale got into the
president's box, Lincoln was technically dead," Houmes said. "He was
able to regain a pulse and get breathing started again. He basically
saved Lincoln's life, even though he didn't survive the wound."
Leale wrote a report for an 1867 congressional committee
investigating the assassination that referenced the earlier account, but
no one had ever seen the original, said Stowell, whose group's goal is
to find every document written by or to Abraham Lincoln during his
lifetime.This undated photo provided by |
[Related: 'Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter' trailer]
At least four researchers have been painstakingly scouring boxes of
documents at the National Archives for more than six years. They
methodically pull boxes of paper — there are millions of records packed
away and never catalogued, Stowell said — and look for "Lincoln docs,"
as Papaioannou called them.
She was assigned the surgeon
general's mail and was leafing through letters pitching inventions for
better ambulances and advice about feeding soldiers onions to ward off
disease when she hit Leale's report, likely rewritten in the neat hand
of a clerk.
"I knew it was interesting. What we didn't know was this was novel,"
Papaioannou said. "We didn't know that this was new, that this was an
1865 report and that it likely hadn't been seen before."Leale, who was 23 and just six weeks into his medical practice when Lincoln died, never spoke or wrote about his experiences again until 1909 in a speech commemorating the centennial of the president's birth.
While Leale's report includes
little sentiment, Papaioannou believes the way he described the moments
after Booth disappeared shows how deeply he was affected.
"I then heard cries that the
'President had been murdered,' which were followed by those of 'Kill the
murderer' 'Shoot him' etc. which came from different parts of the
audience," Leale wrote. "I immediately ran to the Presidents box and as
soon as the door was opened was admitted and introduced to Mrs. Lincoln
when she exclaimed several times, 'O Doctor, do what you can for him, do
what you can!'"
The Papers of Abraham Lincoln,
administered by the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in
Springfield, has found and is digitizing 90,000 documents, Stowell said.
Leale's report — neither written by or to Lincoln — doesn't technically
fall in the group's purview, but Stowell said some exceptions are made
for extraordinary finds.
FILE - This Nov. 8, 1863 file photo |
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