Person:Frederick Bailey (11)

Watchers
m. 25 Feb 1869
  1. Bertha Beatrice Bailey1870 - 1912
  2. Edwin Oliver Bailey1874 - 1953
  3. Dr. Frederick Warren Bailey1876 - 1964
  4. Eunice J Bailey1882 - 1962
  5. Lulu W Bailey1884 - Aft 1920
  6. Thomas Clyde Bailey1885 - 1931
  7. Mary Helen Bailey1893 - 1978
m. 19 Oct 1904
Facts and Events
Name[1] Dr. Frederick Warren Bailey
Gender Male
Birth[1] 30 Sep 1876 Minier, Tazewell, Illinois, United States
Military[2][6] From 1898 to 1903 Spanish-American War
Education[2] 1903 St. Louis City, Missouri, United StatesSt Louis School of Medicine
Marriage 19 Oct 1904 St. Louis City, Missouri, United Statesto Anna Gertrude Pursel
Census 1910 St. Louis (independent city), Missouri, United Stateswith Anna Gertrude Pursel
Living[1] 15 Mar 1911 St. Louis City, Missouri, United StatesPassport Application
Military[2][6] From 29 Oct 1918 to 1919 WWI
Census 1920 St. Louis (independent city), Missouri, United Stateswith Anna Gertrude Pursel
Census 1930 Clayton, St. Louis (county), Missouri, United Stateswith Anna Gertrude Pursel
Census 1940 Normandy, St. Louis (county), Missouri, United Stateswith Anna Gertrude Pursel
Death[2][3] 5 Mar 1964 St. Petersburg, Pinellas, Florida, United States
Burial[4] St. Petersburg, Pinellas, Florida, United States
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Missouri, in United States. Passport applications, 1795-1925. (Washington, D.C. : National Archives)
    Fred Warren Bailey [1].

    Birth Date 30 Sep 1876

  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Fred Warren Bailey, 5 Mar 1964, Saint Petersburg, Pinellas, Florida, in United States. Deceased Physician File (AMA), 1864-1968
    [2].

    St Louis School of Medicine 1903
    Veteran of the Spanish-American and WWI Wars
    Formaly practiced in St Louis

  3. Fred Warren Bailey, Mar 1964, in Florida, United States. Death Index, 1877-1998
    [3] .
  4. Royal Palm South Cemetery, in Find A Grave
    Fred Warren Bailey .

    MISSOURI MAJOR MEDICAL CORPS WORLD WAR I

  5.   Dr. Fred Warren Bailey was the fifth child in a family of four sons and five daughters. He obtained a public school education in Tazewell county, Illinois, and then took up the study of pharmacy, which he later practiced up to the time of his graduation in medicine. He began practicing pharmacy in 1898 and completed a course of study in the St. Louis University Medical School in 1903, while in 1913 his alma mater conferred upon him the Bachelor of Science degree. Following his graduation he served for a year as interne in the St. Louis City Hospital. He is now a member of the surgical staff at St. John’s Hospital of St. Louis, having filled this position since 1905. He was at one time chief of the surgical clinic of the same hospital and formerly was professor of anatomy in the St. Louis Dental College, having thus continued in 1905-6. He was also at one time assistant instructor, assistant professor and at present associate professor of surgery of the St. Louis University, the period of his service in these connections covering from 1908 until the present time. During the same decade he was associate chief surgeon at St. John’s Hospital and since 1919 has been alternating chief surgeon.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Dr. Bailey entered the Spanish-American war as a member of the Fifth Illinois National Guard and later became a corporal and acting sergeant. In he was elected first lieutenant and in 1900 became captain of the company. He served altogether for five years as captain of Company D, Fifth Regiment of the Illinois National Guard. He again responded to the call for military aid during the World war and on the 29th of October, 1918, was made a major in the Medical Corps. For six months he was on duty in the surgeon general’s office at Washington, D. C., and during that period assisted in organizing the overseas unit, known as Mobile Operating Unit, No. 1. The following July he sailed for France, arriving there on the 14th of the month, at which time he was commanding officer of section No. 2, of the Mobile Operating Unit, having at that time sixty-five officers, two hundred and twenty-five men and fifty nurses under his supervision. There he continued in active service during America’s participation in the war, operating and directing surgical services in various field and evacuation hospitals. He was one duty at the battles of Champagne-Marne, Aisne-Marne, Oise-Aisne, the Meuse-Argonne, and YpresLys. He received from the war department a gold chevron and six battle clasps.
    After the armistice was signed he became commanding officer of the entire Mobile Unit and prepared the organization for its return to the states. Dr. Bailey again reached America on the 1st of February, 1919, and upon his return was sent to General Hospital, No. 28, at Fort Sheridan, Illinois, where he organized the surgical service, remaining for several months. He was then ordered to the General Hospital No. 40, at St. Louis, Missouri, and there served as chief of surgical service until June 19, 1919, when he was honorably discharged. The important nature of his professional work, both in the military connection and in private capacity, ranks him as one of the eminent surgeons of St. Louis. He belongs to the St. Louis, Missouri State and American Medical Associations, the Southern Surgical and Western Surgical Associations, the Surgical Society of St. Louis, the Surgical Association of St. Louis, is one of the visiting surgeons of the St. Louis City Hospital and a fellow of the American College of Surgeons.