Surgical Forceps Physical Object
Accession Number
1988.002.0002bAlternate object names
ForcepsDescription
Long, curved, steel forceps were likely medical equipment designed to reach deeply into wounds to remove shot, splinters, bone fragments, or other debris. The bar handle was likely grasped in the hand, while the single loop allowed for the user’s thumb to open and close the device.Exhibition Label
Case Caption (2023):
The Surgeon
Both Cecilio de Ribera aboard the Nuestra Señora de Atocha and Juan de Mercado on the Santa Margarita were ship’s surgeons. At this time, a surgeon was often a barber who had acquired a few additional skills rather than a man with medical training.
He would have few medicines to offer. His resources would include basilicum powder (made from basil) to speed the healing of a wound and poultice ingredients for sores or strains. The lack of fresh food in sailors’ rations would lead to digestive problems in the short term or even scurvy during a long voyage. Many minor illnesses were treated with enemas, whether truly appropriate or not.
In addition, the surgeon would know how to clean a sword cut, dig out a musket ball, or even pull a tooth. He might have to go as far as amputating the limb of an injured sailor. Dipping a man’s freshly severed stump in hot pitch to seal the wound would be as close to hygiene as the operation might come.
Object Caption (2023):
Forceps
Reconstruction
Museum Acquisition Fund
1988.002.0002b