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Richard Sherwood Satterlee (1798–1880) was a medical officer in the United States Army.
Richard Sherwood Satterlee | |
---|---|
Birth name | Richard Sherwood Satterlee |
Born | Fairfield, New York, United States | December 6, 1798
Died | November 10, 1880 New York City, United States | (aged 83)
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service | United States Army Union Army |
Years of service | 1822–1869 |
Rank | Lieutenant Colonel Bvt. Brigadier General |
Battles / wars | Black Hawk War Mexican–American War American Civil War |
Relations | William Satterlee |
Biography
editSatterlee was born on December 6, 1798, in Fairfield, New York. His father, Major. William Satterlee, had served in the American Revolutionary War.[1] Sattlerlee obtained his medical license in 1818 and began practicing in rural Seneca County, New York. He moved to Detroit, then part of the Michigan Territory, in 1822. There he married Mary S. Hunt, sister of John Hunt, a Michigan Territorial Supreme Court Justice. Satterlee died on November 10, 1880, in New York City.
Career
editSatterlee joined the Army in February 1822 at the Detroit Barracks as assistant surgeon. He was subsequently stationed at Fort Niagara in Porter, New York, Fort Howard in Green Bay, Wisconsin, and Fort Mackinac on Mackinac Island, Michigan. In 1831 he transferred to Fort Winnebago in Portage, Wisconsin. While there he would take part in the Black Hawk War.
Following a second tour of duty at Fort Howard, Satterlee was sent to Florida to assist in a campaign against the Seminole. During his time there, he was given an official commendation by his commanding officer, future U.S. President Zachary Taylor.
After a tour of duty at Fort Adams in Newport, Rhode Island, Satterlee was sent to serve in the Mexican–American War. Serving under Winfield Scott, Satterlee took part in the Battle of Molino del Rey and the Battle of Chapultepec. Following his service in the war, he returned to Fort Adams in 1848. In 1853 he survived the sinking of the steamboat San Francisco [2] off the coast from New York as it was carrying an artillery regiment to the West Coast.
He served throughout most of the American Civil War as head of the Union Army's Medical Purveyor's Office in New York City. While there, he oversaw the introduction of the Satterlee bone saw, used for amputations, which had a "pistol grip."[3] This saw is still in use. During the war he was brevetted a Brigadier General and was a candidate for the command of the Medical Corps following the dismissal of Clement Finley. The command eventually went to William Alexander Hammond. Satterlee retired in 1869.
References
edit- ^ "Brigadier General Richard Sherwood Satterle". U.S. Army Medical Department. Retrieved 2011-02-20.
- ^ "Loss of the San Francisco". The Maritine Heritage Project.
- ^ Hawk, Alan (2017). "Richard Satterlee's Bone Saw". Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research. 475 (9): 2191–2193. doi:10.1007/s11999-017-5431-5. PMC 5539050. PMID 28688016.