Ohio History Journal

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AN OHIO DOCTOR IN THE EARLY NAVY

AN OHIO DOCTOR IN THE EARLY NAVY

by HOWARD D. KRAMER

Assistant Professor of History, Western Reserve University

Recently the journals of Lewis A. Wolfley, an Ohio doctor who

served in the United States Navy from 1832 to 1844, were lent to

the writer by a representative of Wolfley's descendants.

The manuscript material in the Wolfley Collection consists of

the surgeon's journals on four cruises and his diary in Paris, where

he studied medicine under world-famous physicians and surgeons

in 1836.1 The collection also contains many letters received by

Wolfley, copies of letters he wrote to the navy department and his

friends, essays submitted to the Athenian Society of Ohio Uni-

versity, his expense account while in Paris, and other miscellaneous

items.

The record of Wolfley's journeys to three continents, in addition

to presenting a splendid picture of the sailing navy on the eve

of its conversion to steam, reveals how an Ohioan from a frontier

settlement viewed life in the more civilized centers of the world.

Lewis A. Wolfley was born on February 14, 1807, at Elizabeth-

town, Pennsylvania. His father, John Wolfley, settled in Elizabeth-

town during the Revolutionary War. In 1794 he became quarter-

master in the second company of Lancaster militia, commanded

by a Captain Heinselman.2 About this time he married Elizabeth

Heintzelman, the mother of Lewis.

At the age of eleven, young Wolfley, a brown-haired, blue-eyed

lad of fair complexion,3 set out on the long journey across the

mountains to Ohio in the custody of an older sister, Catherine, and

her husband, Dr. William N. Luckey. In the spring of 1819 the

three emigrants settled in Circleville, Ohio.

Wolfley's love of reading and learning, so noticeable throughout

his life, indicates that Dr. Luckey did not neglect the education

 

1 The journals fall into five natural divisions: West Indies Cruise, Mediterranean

Cruise, Paris, South American Cruise, and African Cruise.

2 Pennsylvania Archives, Sixth Series (15 vols., Harrisburg, 1906-7), IV, 470.

3 Passport description, February 11, 1842. Wolfley Collection.

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