Dr. Daniel Wood's Revolutionary War service

Daniel Wood was born July 10, 1751, at Warwick, Orange County, N.Y. He was an educated man, fluent in several languages and was an accomplished surgeon who practiced medicine in Warwick as early as 1775.
When the Revolutionary War erupted, Dr. Wood enrolled as a surgeon in the New York militia in the latter part of 1776. For an established man such as Daniel Wood, it was a momentous decision – by rebelling against the English Crown one risked not only loss of property, but possibly a trip to the gallows.
Dr. Wood first served in southeastern New York and New Jersey before accompanying Gen. George Washington's army as it retreated into Pennsylvania after suffering a series of crushing defeats. He was present when Washington's downtrodden survivors crossed the ice-choked Delaware River on Christmas night 1776 to surprise 1,500 Hessians at Trenton, N.J., the next morning. Within 45 minutes of the first shot, Washington had netted 900 prisoners. After this much lauded victory, Dr. Wood continued with the army for six more weeks, nursing the sick.
Prior to the success at Trenton, Washington's army was on the brink of disintegration, having shrunk from a once defiant 20,000 to a paltry 2,400 demoralized soldiers. Worse yet, many of his men's enlistments were about to expire. As a consequence Washington petitioned Congress for additional troops. Heeding his plea, Congress authorized the raising of sixteen new regiments. One of these, Col. William Malcolm's Additional Continental Regiment, began organizing on Jan. 7, 1777, with a young firebrand named Aaron Burr serving as lieutenant colonel. Malcolm's regiment mustered some 260 men recruited from New York and Pennsylvania, organized into six companies. On March 11, 1777, 25-year-old Daniel Wood received a commission as first lieutenant in Capt. John W. Watkins' Sixth Company.
At that time Cap. Watkins' company was a hollow one, containing officers, but lacking enlisted men. To remedy this the captain and newly commissioned Lt. Wood immediately embarked on a recruiting expedition with authorization to offer each prospective soldier a $20 enlistment bonus as well as 100 acres upon completion of three years service. After a 10-week tour, Watkins and Wood returned to camp with 33 men, of which eight promptly deserted within days of enrolling. With no other physician present, Lt. Wood was asked to inspect the recruits to determine if they were fit for duty. He continued in this unofficial capacity until May 1777 when Col. Malcolm requested he fill the role of regimental surgeon, at the rate of two dollars per day.
Throughout the summer of 1777 Malcolm's regiment remained in camp at Ramapo, N.Y., drilling and sending detachments to guard the local inhabitants against British and Tory depredations.
In early October 1777 the regiment struck tents and marched to Coryell's Ferry on the Delaware River where they crossed into Pennsylvania to join the Continental Army encamped at Tawamensings. Upon arrival Capt. Watkins resigned to accept a staff position and command of Sixth Company fell to Lt. Daniel Wood.
The next December, the bedraggled army shuffled into winter quarters at Valley Forge in southeastern Pennsylvania. The weather turned bitterly cold before enough huts could be erected. The hardships were insufferable. Not only were the men ill-clad, hungry and lacking potable water, but the camp soon became overrun with garbage, dead horses and human waste. Diseases such as typhus, typhoid, pneumonia and smallpox were rampant. Again acting as regimental surgeon, Dr. Wood had his hands full. Before the ordeal was over, more than 2,500 soldiers had perished. But the army survived.
When spies informed Gen.l Washington of British General Sir Henry Clinton's June 18, 1778, evacuation of Philadelphia, the commander-in-chief ordered an immediate pursuit. His army marched out of Valley Forge, heartened by a new French alliance and hardened by the likes of Baron Von Steuben who had drilled them with strict Prussian discipline. Now 11,000 strong and brimming with confidence the Continentals caught up with Clinton's army at Monmouth, N.J. Regimental surgeon Daniel Wood laid out his instruments in preparation of impending slaughter.
Due to cessation of English imports, his medicine chest would have been woefully inadequate. When possible, opium was administered to alleviate a wounded soldier's suffering, but most likely a quaff of rum would have to do. Equipped with such instruments as lancets, forceps, tourniquets, saws and splints he would have done his best to correct what bullets, sabers and cannon balls had done. An eighteenth century field hospital would have revealed a nightmarish scene where soldiers howled in agony as the surgeon's saw rasped rhythmically through tissue and bone. At times an amputation required 20 to 40 minutes to complete. Elsewhere others would grimace as slender tongs probed for leaden musket balls while another's sword cuts were packed with flaxen fibers. Any who survived their wounds faced the very real possibility of infection, and possibly a lingering death by gangrene.
In addition to battle wounds there were other complications. The June 28, 1778, Battle of Monmouth was conducted beneath a broiling summer sun. As the battle progressed, temperatures soared to 100 degrees and more, causing many soldiers to collapse with heat stroke. Among those afflicted was Lt. Col. Aaron Burr – so it is very likely that the future vice president and slayer of Alexander Hamilton was treated by Dr. Wood, whose station as regimental surgeon was just behind the firing line.
The hard-fought battle ended in a draw with the British slipping away toward New York City that evening. When the American army resumed its march, an exhausted Daniel Wood stayed behind to tend the wounded.
After six weeks in the field hospital, Dr. Wood returned to his regiment which was then posted to Fort Clinton, near West Point, N.Y., where he resumed his dual role of company commander and regimental surgeon. Capt. Wood remained at Fort Clinton until December 1778 when his regiment marched to Haverstraw, N.Y.
The New Year heralded change. In effort to consolidate the Continental Army the various additional Continental regiments were being reduced in number and Malcolm's command was slated for disbandment. On Jan. 13, 1779, the Pennsylvania men were transferred to the 11th Pennsylvania Regiment while the balance of the regiment (the New York men) remained temporarily intact. With the coming of spring the drums rolled anew and the whittled regiment once again assembled for action. Led by Lt. Col. Burr, they marched to Minisink, N.Y., near the Delaware River to stand ready to join Gen. John Sullivan's punitive expedition against the warring tribes of the Six Nations in Upper New York. However, before the campaign commenced the final disbandment order arrived. On April 1, 1779, the New York men were dispatched to augment Col. Spencer's Additional Continental Regiment and Malcolm's regiment ceased to exist. With that Capt. Daniel Wood became an excess officer; he resigned his commission on April 23, 1779, putting an end to his military experience.
Although Daniel Wood had periodically commanded an infantry company, his military service revolved around the saving of lives, not taking them. Like many veterans he doubtlessly suppressed images of battle's carnage and withering disease as he pursued more civil vocations. Upon conclusion of his service he resumed his medical practice in his native Warwick and later still in central New York. But that is another story.
The sword, now pitted and stained as if anointed by patriot tears, in its own way, tells its story – that of the birth of our nation.
Local author Cleve Barkley lives in Loraine and writes with a focus on military history. He is currently a contributing author for "WWII History" magazine.
Sources
1775 Orange County Assessment Rolls. www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/nyorange/
Aaron Burr. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_Burr
Battle of Monmouth. Http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Monmouth
Blackstone, William. Blackstone Commentaries on the Laws of England in Four books. New York: Bater, Voorhis and Co., 1936
Complied Revolutionary War Military Records, 1775-1783. Washington, DC: National Archives and Records Administration
Declaration of Independence. Philadelphia, July 4, 1776
Dunn, Thomas F., jr. Application for membership in Sons of American Revolution. Oak Park, Illinois: Sons of the American Revolution, October 22, 1949
Extra Continental Regiments and Additional Continental Regiments.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extra_Continental_regiments_and_Additional_Continental_regiments
Fleming, Thomas. Liberty! The American Revolution. New York: Penguin Press, 1997
Headley, Russel. The History of Orange County, New York. Middletown, NY: Van Deusen and Elms. 1908
Isenberg, Nancy. Fallen Founder: The Life of Aaron Burr. New York: Penguin Press, 2007
John Wood (governor). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Wood_(governor)
Lancaster, Bruce and J. H. Plumb. The American Heritage Book of the American Revolution. New York: 1979 American Heritage reprint of Dell Publishing Co., 1958
Malcolm's Additional Continental Regiment.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malcolm's_Additional_Continental_Regiment
Reed, John F. Valley Forge: Crucible of Victory. Monmouth Beach, JJ: Pillip Freneau Press, 1969
Stephenson, Michael. Patriot Battles: How the War of Independence Was Fought. New York: Harper-Collins, 2007
U.S. Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783. Washington, DC: National Archives and Records Administration
Valley Forge. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valley_Forge
Walker, William Scott. Application for membership in Sons of American Revolution. Evanston, Illinois: Sons of the American Revolution, September 28, 1942
Watkins, Judith. Application for Widow's Pension for Husband's Revolutionary War Service, W-9583, November 9, 1838. Washington, DC: National Archives and Records Administration
Wood, Catherine. Application for Widow's Pension for Husband's Revolutionary War Service, W-18382, December 7, 1843. Washington, DC: National Archives and Records Administration
Wood, Daniel. Application for Pension for Revolutionary War Service, W-18382, December 3, 1832; BLWT-2372. Washington, DC: National Archives and Records Administration





