 
DR. BACON SAUNDERS
DR. BACON SAUNDERS, of Fort Worth, is one of the best known and most
successful surgeons of Texas and the entire south. Surgery is today the
greatest of all applied sciences, and many far-sighted men believe that it is
a question of only a few decades in the future when the knowledge of the
physician will become universal knowledge and his profession will lose its
distinctive importance to mankind, and that the surgeon with his skill will
take his present ally's place as the benefactor and final resort of suffering
humanity. At the present stage of progress in this direction only a very few,
and those men of peculiar skill and preeminence, have, through choice or
circumstance, devoted themselves wholly to the practice of surgery, and one of
these -- and indeed the only one in North Texas -- is Dr. Saunders. The
science of surgery appealed to him from his first introduction to it. the
unusual skill early exhibited in operations marked plainly the leadings into
that branch of the profession, and his foremost merit and rank in the art have
now for some years claimed his services as surgical specialist to the
exclusion of all allied interests.
A Kentuckian by birth, though identified with North Texas practically all his
life. Dr. Saunders was born at Bowling Green, January 5, 1855. Occupying as he
does front rank in his profession, he none the less regards with more than
parental veneration the life and career of his father, Dr. John Smith
Saunders, who, in his time was one of the best of old-school physicians,
and through the influence of whose example it was that the son adopted the
medical profession. Dr. John Smith Saunders, who was born at Glasgow,
Kentucky, after attaining high standing in the medical profession in his
native state, in 1857 came to Dallas, Texas, then situated almost on the
frontier. As a pioneer doctor at this place in the years immediately preceding
the war he became known over a wide surrounding territory. His visits across
the sparsely settled county, bearing cheer and healing to the isolated
families, often penetrated into Tarrant county, and to the easy-circumstanced
dweller in town or city of the present day imagination alone must picture the
hardships which the good doctor encountered on these horseback journeys, with
his medicines packed in his saddlebags, or the joy with which he was hailed by
the suffering, who had perhaps a waited his coming for days, whereas in this
age the same number of hours would seem long, and who would not see him again
on his rounds for several weeks. Filling the place of friend, counselor and
helper, his part in the life of that historical epoch is none the less
important because it was unostentatiously performed. He thus continued to
practice at Dallas until the war came on. A Kentuckian, it is not strange that
his admiration for the fellow citizen Henry Clay made him an adherent of old-
line Whig principles, and when the question of secession came up for
settlement, though a firm believer in state rights, he opposed the separation
from the Union. But, like Lewis T. Wigfall, whom he so admired, and like
hundreds of conspicuous and eminent southerners his loyalty to Dixie, when the
issue came to settlement, aligned him without hesitation with the Confederacy.
Enlisting in 1862, he was appointed brigade surgeon on the staff of General R.
M. Gano, and as such served till the close of the war. On his return to Dallas
he decided to give up the practice of medicine, and for several years during
that period of industrial prostration following the war he took a prominent
part in business affairs. He built and operated the first steam mill at
Dallas, and this was also in the mercantile business, until the failure of his
health obliged him to retire. His children were then at the age where they
needed better educational facilities than were afforded at Dallas, and this
was the prime consideration that induced him to move to Bonham in 1869. There
he built up a large general practice, and lived until his death in 1891. He at
one time served as president of the North Texas Medical Association, and stood
very high among the members of his profession. Noteworthy and successful
though he was a physician, his character was of those proportions that
interest adheres more in the man than in his works. Of firm and positive
convictions, he commanded respect and wielded influence among men as a leader,
although he never used the qualities for any king of political preferment, and
the most important position he held was a brigade surgeon during the war. In
the Christian church, however, he took a very active part, and was a devoted
member till his death. Though he energies were almost constantly directed to
serious affairs, yet he possessed the social qualities which attached men to
him through affection as well as respect. While he never posed as a raconteur,
he was an engaging story teller, and was especially fond of pointing a serious
principle with an illustrative anecdote. Schools of a primitive time supplied
him with only the barest fundamentals upon which later insistent study and
observation reared a most intimate knowledge of literature, men and events.
His love for the classic in literature never deserted, and even in camp when
surrounded by all the stern realities of military life he was wont to read his
Shakespeare aloud to his fellow officers, and such was his sympathetic
acquaintance with that author that it is said he knew half the plays by
memory.
Such was the father, and it is from his character and example that the son had
drawn much of the power and practical idealism for success. Beginning his
education in a private school taught in the Odd Fellows' hall at Dallas, in
1869, on the family's removal to Bonham, he entered Carlton College, at that
time one of the highest grade institutions in East Texas. Its founder and
president had come from Missouri to Dallas, where he for a year or so presided
over the above-mentioned school in the Odd Fellows' hall, and in 1867 moved to
Bonham and established Carlton College. After leaving this institution for a
time, and in the evenings and vacation intervals read medicine in his father's
office. When a boy of seventeen, in 1872, he spent one vacation in the rough
ranching life of the Texas frontier. Entering the medical department of the
University of Louisville (Kentucky), he graduated March 1, 1877, with the
highest honors of his class, and at the early age of twenty-two began his
class, and at the early age of twenty-two began his professional career. A
partnership with his father at Bonham gave him a broad practical experience
and likewise much repute for skill throughout the territory covered by their
practice. His special aptitude for surgery had been shown during his
university career, and it was the surgical branch of the firm's practice to
which he gave special attention. His practice in Bonham continued until
January, 1893, and the demands upon his skill even then calling him far beyond
his local residence, he moved to Fort Worth, where the unexcelled railroad
facilities would afford greater opportunity to care for his increasing
patronage. At Fort Worth he became a partner in practice with the late W.
A. Adams, who afterward removed to St. Louis, and with F. D.
Thompson of this city. During the five years in which this relation
continued he devoted some of his attention to general practice, although even
then his skill in surgery brought him all the practice he could well care for.
It became necessary finally for him to relinquish all work as medical
practitioner, and though this transfer to a specialty was not easily made
because of the insistence of his patrons that he continue to attend to general
cases, for the past seven or eight to general cases, for the past seven or
eight years he has confined his professional work wholly to surgery and
surgical diseases of women to consultation in such cases.
Dr. Saunders is one of the founders of the medical department of Fort Worth
University, served ten years as its dean, and is secretary and treasurer of
the board of trustees, and also holds the chair of principles and practice of
surgery and clinical surgery in that institution. He is chief surgeon for the
Fort Worth and Denver City Railroad, is division surgeon for the Texas and
Pacific, the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe, the St. Louis and Southwestern, and
the International and Great Northern, and the International and Great
Northern, and is now vice president of the American Association of Railway
Surgeons. His high position in medical circles is attested by membership in
the American Medical Association and high official positions in other well
known organizations. He was one of the founders and an ex-president of the
North Texas Medical Association serving as president of that organization
before his father held the same position; is ex-president of the Texas State
Medical Association; is ex-vice president of the International Railway
Surgeons' Association; and is past vice president also of the Southern
Surgical and Gynecological Society, a body whose membership is restricted to
those who have attained acknowledged skill in surgery, and its members are
recognized as preeminent in the profession. It is as surgeon in charge of St.
Joseph's Infirmary in Fort Worth that Dr. Saunders does most of his hospital
work. Possessed of enormous energy and vitality, he is able to use his skill
in work that for effectiveness and quantity is seldom surpassed, and his
record for successful major operations performed day after day places him in
class to himself. Within recent years in recognition of his high standing in
his profession, Dr. Saunders has been honored with the degree of LL. D. by the
Arkansas Industrial University and by the State Normal University of Virginia.
The active years of his life have been completely engrossed with his
profession, and he has allowed no external influences or pursuits to divert
him from its mastery and successful prosecution. His only diversion from
practice, absolutely essential to one who gives himself so completely to his
work, is a two-months' vacation each year, usually spent in the Adirondack
mountains with his family. His offices, in the Saunders' building at Fort
Worth, are finely equipped for surgical work.
Dr. Saunders was married at Bonham, October 30, 1877, to a prominent young
lady of that place. Miss Ida Caldwell, a native of Tennessee. She is
prominent in Fort Worth society and is one of the lady members of the Texas
World's Fair commission and connected with various other clubs. Dr. and Mrs.
Sanders have two children, Roy F. and Linda Ray [Saunders]. The
son took his degree in the medical department of the Fort Worth University in
the spring of 1905, and at the present writing is pursuing post-graduate work
in Jefferson Medical College at Philadelphia. He is thus the third generation
to adopt the medical profession, so that the name of Saunders will have
enduring prominence in the annals of southern medicine and surgery.
B. B. Paddock, History and Biographical Record of North and West Texas (Chicago:
Lewis Publishing Co., 1906), Vol. 1, pp. 130-133.
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