Doctor served country during World War I
Dr. Warren Pearce left Quincy for the Navy less than 48 hours after the United States declared war on the Axis powers on April 6, 1917.
He was a member of the Illinois Naval Militia, later known as the Quincy Naval Reserves. By 1915, when the United States Naval Reserve was organized, Quincy became the headquarters of the 10th Illinois division.
The militia became part of the National Naval Volunteers in 1916. These volunteers could be called to service by President Wilson within 48 hours of a war declaration.
Warren Pearce was born in 1885, the son of Jackson and Elizabeth Pearce. The family moved to Quincy in 1891, when Jackson Pearce became the county clerk. He served on the board of directors of Ricker National Bank, and was later the president of Home Telephone Company. Warren graduated from the Chicago College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1908.
After serving a residency at Cook County Hospital, he returned to Quincy and opened his practice. He married Lillian Swope in 1913. Their son Warren Jr. was born in 1916.
Dr. Pearce’s first assignment was at Great Lakes Training Station north of Chicago, where he served as a surgeon. In July he was transferred to New York where he helped organize hospital equipment for his ship, which left for France in August. He served as a 1st Lieutenant on the flagship, the USS Wakiva II, which was described as an “armed yacht.” This ship was part of a 19 vessel convoy. After arriving in France, he had extended sea duty on a ship doing convoy escort along the coast of France, where the danger was submarine attacks.
Lt. Pearce wrote many letters home which the family then shared with the Quincy newspapers.
Though his letters were heavily censored, they served as a record of his two years and six months service in the Navy. In October 1917, he describes one four week trip where the seas were so rough, everyone on board was sick.
On October 28, he witnessed the attack on the transport SS Finland which was an ocean liner chartered by the Army. The Wakiva II lowered lifeboats and the USS Alcedo, another armed yacht, worked as a team to rescue the men who had jumped into the water.
The Finland did not sink but managed to get back to port, reporting only nine deaths. In letters home he described the Wakiva rescue of 126 people from the water.
He wrote, “When the sufferers were rescued from the ocean, the task was only partly done. Then it was necessary to take them onto the boat, where they were treated. Many were burned, and severely so, and others suffered bruises from falling timbers and parts of the boat. Other suffered from the cold water and from the quantity of water they had taken into their systems.”
As quoted in the Quincy Daily Whig, the letter further states: “One had a crushing injury of the hand, another developed pneumonia, another had a ruptured intestine. (I sort of patted myself on the back for this diagnosis which was proved at operation this morning).” He writes about getting no sleep, not eating, with the “fellows” trying to rest everywhere on the ship. This unlucky group had their first ship sunk and now their second ship. As they docked, he writes, “We arrived at Brest (France) very early this morning and the sunrise and everything was beautiful.”
On November 5, 1917, while on patrol, Lt. Pearce witnessed the sinking of the USS Alcedo. Both the Wakiva and the Alcedo served in the same antisubmarine patrols. He describes that sinking as a mistake writing, “I hardly think the sub meant to attack her, but came up so close it was one or the other, or I wouldn’t be surprised if she thought the Alcedo was something else. It was 2 a.m.”
While at sea, Lieut. Pearce served as fleet surgeon and according to the Quincy Daily Herald, he “… was one of the youngest men holding that position in the United States Navy and one of the first ever appointed who had not previously had long sea duty.” He served as the chief surgeon for seven months of convoy duty.
In February 1918, after recovery from minor surgery, he established a naval base hospital at Lorient France.
He remained at that post until the base closed in February 1919. He was then in charge of the surgical department of the USS Carola which was a disabled ship serving as the naval base hospital for the port of Brest.
Lt. Pearce returned to the United States on April 19, 1919, when the Leviathan docked in Hoboken, N.J. His wife and son went east to welcome him home. He was assigned to a naval hospital in Brooklyn. In September 1919, he was transferred back to the Great Lakes Naval Training Station where he was discharged in October 1919.
In early November Dr. Pearce re-opened his practice with an office in the Majestic Building. He had closed his original office at 1235 Broadway, where he and his family had lived upstairs, when he left for the war in 1917.
Over his 54 years of practice in Quincy, Dr. Pearce was a member of the medical staffs of St. Mary Hospital and Blessing Hospital, first joining the surgical staff in 1911. In later years he specialized in internal medicine and cardiology, and was a fellow in the American College of Physicians.
Prior to his war service he lectured the nursing students on surgery and on skin and venereal diseases.
Dr. Pearce was active in his profession, twice serving as president of the Adams County Medical Society.
After helping to organize the Illinois Heart Association, he served in various capacities. He was equally committed to civic organizations, serving on various boards and participating in the American Legion, the YMCA, Kiwanis and the Masons.
Dr. Pearce died in June 1964, and is buried in Quincy Memorial Park.
Arlis Dittmer is a retired medical librarian. During her 26 years with Blessing Health System, she became interested in medical and nursing history — both topics frequently overlooked in history.





