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Atlantic article on Lincoln's survival
12-04-2013, 05:55 AM
Post: #17
RE: Atlantic article on Lincoln's survival
(12-03-2013 03:06 PM)Houmes Wrote:  The path of the bullet may actually have been more midline, than on either side.

From what I have read 9 men were present for the autopsy. These were: Surgeon General Dr. Joseph K. Barnes, Lincoln family physician, Dr. Robert King Stone, Dr. Charles Sabin Taft, Assistant Surgeon General Dr. Charles H. Crane, Army Assistant Surgeon William Morrow Notson, General Rucker of the Army's Quartermaster Department (whose men had escorted the hearse back to the White House), Lincoln's friend, Orville H. Browning, Army Assistant Surgeon Joseph Janvier Woodward, and Army Assistant Surgeon Edward Curtis.

The formal report was written by Dr. Woodward, but Dr. Curtis wrote his mother as follows:

"Dr. Woodward and I proceeded to open the head and remove the brain down to the track of the ball. The latter had entered a little to the left of the median line at the back of the head, had passed almost directly forwards through the center of the brain and lodged. Not finding it readily, we proceeded to remove the entire brain, when, as I was lifting the latter from the cavity of the skull, suddenly the bullet dropped out through my fingers and fell, breaking the solemn silence of the room with its clatter, into an empty basin that was standing beneath."

Since the path of the ball seems key to prognosis, I am wondering what Dr. Curtis is saying here. He seems to be saying that the ball was lodged in the center of the brain, and not in either the left or right side.

Dr. Woodward wrote, "The ball entered through the occipital bone about one inch to the left of the median line and just above the left lateral sinus, which it opened. It then penetrated the dura matter, passed through the left posterior lobe of the cerebrum, entered the left lateral ventricle and lodged in the white matter of the cerebrum just above the anterior portion of the left corpus striatum, where it was found."

Are the two doctors saying the same thing or is Dr. Curtis implying the bullet ended up to the right of where Dr. Woodward said it ended up? For us laymen, does it make a big difference in possible outcome?
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RE: Atlantic article on Lincoln's survival - RJNorton - 12-04-2013 05:55 AM

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