Dr. Edward Gaggs Castle, an Early Quincy Doctor

Edward Gaggs Castle was born in Carlisle, England in 1814. Carlisle is just 10 miles south of the border of Scotland. He got his chemist (pharmacy) degree from King’s College in 1841. Castle, his second wife Jane Carrick Castle, and their two children Sarah Jane and George, sailed from Liverpool England and arrived in New York in May 1849. The family came to Quincy that same year after a brief stay in St. Louis where Castle received his medical training. They arrived during a cholera epidemic which ultimately killed 400 people in Quincy.
In 1857, his office was located at 89 Hampshire Street. During the 1850s and early 1860s, he was called to testify at several coroner’s inquests and at jury trials held due to a suspicious death. These deaths included arsenic poisoning and fatal beatings between spouses. The newspapers also reported his disagreements with the Board of Supervisors and their Pauper Claim Committee which thought his bills were too high in his care of the indigent.
In 1860, he was president of the Adams County Medical Society, which had organized in 1850 due to the need to cooperate during the cholera epidemic of the previous year. In 1861, Dr. Castle supervised the first military hospital in Quincy, Army Hospital Branch No. 1, located on the west side of South Fifth Street during the Civil War. The hospital was open from July 1861 to July 1865. Governor Richard Yates wanted Illinois soldiers treated in Illinois hospitals. The riverboats would regularly deliver the wounded and sick to Quincy. In the first four months, the hospital treated 605 cases, with only 18 deaths. Unfortunately, 17 of those deaths were due to diseases such as typhoid fever, measles, heart disease, bronchitis, bilious fever (malaria), and consumption (tuberculosis). Only one death was from a war wound.
The Quincy Whig said in 1861, “Dr. Castle and his assistants, with the nurses give the kindest care and watchfulness to the patients, and are hoping for better times soon; though as yet the government has not advanced the first dimes of compensation.” The newspaper also suggested that citizens bring in reading materials for those recovering soldiers as “reading and writing constitute the chief ‘pastime’ of these able to sit up.” By 1865, there were five hospitals in Quincy to care for the soldiers.
Even though he was in charge of an army hospital, Dr. Castle continued to see civilian patients and work with the city on health issues. In 1863, Mayor Thomas Redmond relied on his help with a smallpox outbreak. Reports were circulating that it was an epidemic, but Castle assured the mayor that “there were not more than six cases of smallpox in the city.” The Quincy Daily Whig on January 16, 1863 said, “The reports are unfounded, and our neighbors may visit us without danger.”
Two years after the Civil War ended Orville Hickman Browning, while serving as U. S. Secretary of the Interior, appointed Dr. Castle as the United States Consular Agent at Carlyle England. He served in that position from 1867-1873, and returned to England briefly in 1874.
The newly constituted Quincy Board of Health appointed Dr. Castle to the Fourth District, which was east of Sixth Street to Eighteenth Street and north of Maine in 1873. The city was divided into five districts and those appointed were to report nuisances which might turn into public health issues, and contagious disease cases. Nuisances could be excessive trash, standing water in a lot, and slaughterhouses. Picking up dead animals and other items was done by the city “scavenger.” According to the Daily Herald of August 19, 1874, “Dr. Castle presented the following: In view of the exceptional mortality occurring amongst children during last month in the Fourth ward, the Secretary and Sanitary Police officers are requested to make special inquiry and see if there is not some probably local cause to account for it.”
Dr. Castle was involved in other businesses, one of which was owning and selling real estate. He sold lots in his sub-division of Nevins addition to Quincy. Nevins addition was originally the 120 acres of Robert Tillson’s farm between Twelfth and Eighteenth Sts. and lying north of Broadway.
He later invested in the Vandiver corn planter. According the Daily Herald in 1872, “The organization is a strong one, well offered. The President, Dr, Castle, being well fitted for the position, is entitled to the confidence of the public everywhere.” The planter was patented in 1863 by John W. Vandiver and began manufacture in 1865. In 1870 a stock company was formed. The first president was Lorenzo Bull. Dr. Castle succeeded him.
Dr. Castle’s son George became a
businessman and worked with the various Quincy companies manufacturing plows,
including the Vandiver and the Barlow Rotary plow. The Castle family was living on a farm in
Ellington Township in the late 1870s. In 1879, the Quincy Whig reported, “For
five weeks past a Barlow has been at work constantly on the farm of Dr. Castle…
and has planted during this time over 300 acres of corn…”
With all of Dr. Castle’s business
interests and civic responsibilities, he was elected as a delegate for
Ellington Township to the Republican
County Convention, and he was still practicing medicine. He continued his membership in the Adams
County Medical Society and became president again in 1878. At the same time, he
was also president of the Medical Board of Blessing Hospital, serving from 1878
to 1880.
Dr. Castle died September 22,
1880, in his home after a brief illness. The funeral took place at his north 24th
Street residence. He is buried in Woodland Cemetery. The Adams County Medical Society said in their
memorial, “Honored in his profession, honoring it by a dignified, faithful and
fearless discharge of his duties, wise in council, upright in character, ruling
with a firm yet gentle hand, carrying all the generosity and freshness of youth
into the autumn of life, he has passed away in the maturity of years.”
Sources
Adams County Medical Society.” Quincy Daily Whig , September 23, 1880, 8.
Ancestry.com. New York, Passenger and Immigration Lists, 1820-1850 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2003.
“The Barlow Rotary: Acknowledge to be the Best Planter in the World.” Quincy Whig , October 2, 1879, 8.
“Board of Health.” Quincy Daily Herald , August 19, 1874, 4.
“Board of Health.” Quincy Daily Herald , June 15, 1875, 4.
“Brevities.” Quincy Daily Whig , September 22, 1880, 8.
Collins, William H. and Cicero F. Perry. Past and Present of the City of Quincy and Adams County Illinois, 230. Chicago: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1905.
“Coroner’s Inquest.” Quincy Daily Herald, October 6, 1858, 2.
Find A Grave . Find A Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi .
Gay, Captain William H. “The Quincy Army Hospitals During the Civil War.” Manuscript File D. I. 608. Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County: Quincy IL
“Inquest.”
Quincy
Daily Whig
, November 21, 1853, 2.
“Lively Caucuses: The Election Today of Delegates to the Republican County Convention.” Quincy Whig , April 26, 1880, 8.
McReynolds, R., M. D. (1945). “ Adams County Medical Society of Illinois 1850-1945.” Mississippi Valley Medical Journal, 67 , 19-33.
“Obituary.” Quincy Whig , September 23, 1880, 8.
Portrait and Biographical Record of Adams County Illinois. Chicago: Chapman Bros. 1892 p. 585
“Proceedings of the Board of Health.” Quincy Daily Whig , May 24, 1873, 4.
“Quincy Hospital.” Quincy Whig , November 2, 1861, 3.
“Real Estate Sales.” Quincy Whig , March 19, 1866, 3.
“Small Pox.” Quincy Daily Whig , January 16, 1863, 3.
“The Supervisors and the Doctors.” Quincy Daily Whig , January 21, 1860, 2.
“The Vandiver.” Quincy Daily Herald , April 28, 1872, 6.





