Early history The earliest positions for medical officers in the
British East India Company (formed as the Association of Merchant Adventurers in 1599 and receiving the royal charter on the last day of 1600) were as ship surgeons. The first three surgeons to have served were John Banester on the
Leicester, Lewis Attmer on the
Edward and Rober on the
Francis. The first Company fleet went out in 1600 with
James Lancaster on the Red Dragon and three other ships, each with two surgeons and a barber. This was the voyage on which the serendipitous experiment on lemon juice as a cure for scurvy was carried out. The establishment of the East India Company in India was greatly aided by a doctor, although a lot of fiction may have been introduced into accounts relating to this.
Gabriel Boughton is said to have saved Shah Jahan's daughter princess Jahanara from injuries due to burns. In reward he was given duty-free trading rights and this document was utilized by the East India Company to obtain a
farman or rights for itself from the ruler in Surat. As more factories of the East India Company were established in India at this time, new positions began to be created for the appointment of surgeons and physicians. These men of medicine included Nicholas Manucci, a
Venetian born in 1639 who served
Dara Shikoh before studying medicine in
Lahore where he served
Shah Alam from 1678 to 1682. Later, he then settled in Madras. An
Armenian named Sikandar Beg served as surgeon to Suleiman Shikoh, son of Darah Shikoh, and there are records of several Dutch and French physicians in various courts across India.
Samuel Browne served around 1694 at Fort St. George, Madras from where he also reported on his botanical and other natural history studies. Jean Martin served Haider Ali and Jean Castarede served under Tipoo Sultan. A hierarchy was introduced into the establishment of the East India Company in 1614 with the appointment of a surgeon general. The first to accept this position was John Woodall, who was however accused of embezzling pay from apprentices that he used to hire. With continuing complaints and financial crunch he was retrenched in 1642. Another Surgeon Walter Chesley was sent home from service in Sumatra for drunkenness, while a Dr. Coote was removed from Bencoolen for debauchery in 1697. Surgeons were often assigned on diplomatic missions to various courts and they were found to be very influential. The first surgeon at Calcutta was a Dutchman who resigned in 1691.
William Hamilton was particularly famous.
John Zephaniah Holwell who came to Bengal as a Surgeon in 1732 was appointed as
Zamindar of Calcutta. He was captured in 1756 by Siraj-ud-Daulah and survived the Black Hole. Holwell was noted as a careful student of native customs and it has been suggested that if he had been in charge of Fort William, the entire incident would not have happened. He returned to England and became as an advisor on various matters of government. Surgeons were often spared in wartime. William Fullerton was the sole survivor in 1763 at Patna when the English fought Nawab Mir Qasim. Later, around 1830, John Martin Honigberger from Transylvania served Ranjit Singh. He also worked at a hospital set up by Sir Henry Lawrence at Lahore.
Benjamin Simpson is particularly well known for capturing numerous photographs during his service in the second half of the 19th century.
Later history Later, in the nineteenth century, the IMS became one of the routes to becoming a
Political officer in the
Indian Political Department. The
British Indian government set up the Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine between 1910 and its opening in 1921 as a postgraduate center for tropical medicine at the heart of the Indian Empire. Charles Stiebel served with the medical services during the
First World War. In August 1915, he was transferred to the 5th Indian General Hospital at
Alexandria in
Egypt where he served for the 135th Indian Field Ambulance. Stiebel served as a lieutenant with the Indian Medical Service including with No. 1 Indian General Hospital. On 3 April 1943, the Indian Medical Service, the
Indian Medical Department, and the
Indian Hospital & Nursing Corps were amalgamated into the
Indian Army Medical Corps. It was formed as a wartime necessity for attracting suitably qualified men for service in a rapidly expanding army. The IAMC was re-designated the Army Medical Corps with effect from 26 January 1950. == Structure ==