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Dr. Nicholas T. Schilling

Saddle, Satchel & Skill

By Marie Hughes  


The Texas pioneer doctors serving the Texas frontier during the 1800s were a great source of hope for early settlers, as towns were widespread and hospitals were rare indeed. Many were self-taught, gaining hard-earned knowledge through mail order medical books and their personal successes and failures. Some fledgling doctors were lucky enough to find a doctor to study under. Chambers County was blessed to have Dr. Nicholas Schilling, a highly respected doctor in our area who received a formal education before arriving in Texas. Regardless of his educational status, he never elevated himself above his neighbors, but was known by all for his humility and benevolence.


Born in Bavaria, Germany in 1845, he moved to America, settling in Maryland when he was just a baby. After serving in the Maryland Cavalry, he attended Chicago Medical College (Now Northwestern University Medical School) receiving his Doctor of Medicine degree in 1872. In 1874, he relocated to Texas. His practice was centered mostly in Cedar Bayou and West Chambers County. He always sported a goatee beard and the local children described him as looking like Santa Claus, with the exception, that is, of the black patch he always wore over his blinded eye. The poorest of his patients received the same concerned care as the wealthiest, accepting produce as his fee from those unable to pay, and sometimes just a home-cooked meal. Others paid by doing odd jobs like chopping firewood or mending fences. 

A True General Practitioner

By Joan McAnall

  

Possibly one of the finest and most complete examples of the workings of the medical profession during the late 1800s and early 1900s is preserved for future generations in the original office building of Dr. Nicholas Schilling, now located in Anahuac. Schilling was a typical doctor of his day, diagnosing his patients without the benefits of the now-available testing techniques and treating them with medicines he concocted in his own laboratory. According to Schilling’s records, he treated between three and twelve patients daily, some in his two-story pine and cypress clinic which was located on the Chambers County banks of Cedar Bayou and others, in their homes, to which he traveled on horseback. Some of these excursions took the doctor to what then were considered somewhat far away communities including Mont Belvieu and Sheldon. Schilling, a native of Bavaria, Germany, was born in 1845. When he was about three months old, his parents moved the family to the United States, eventually settling in Maryland. As a young man, Schilling enlisted in the Union Army in 1864, as a shoemaker, serving until he was discharged the next year, according to W. Everett Dupuy, a Houston attorney and nephew of the pioneer doctor. Based on communications between Dupuy and the Chambers County Historical Commission, there is apparently little information regarding Schilling's life in the immediate years after the Civil War, except that most of his family moved to Iowa and Illinois, where most of the Schilling family lives today. In about 1872 he graduated with a Doctor of Medicine degree from Chicago Medical College, the present-day Northwestern University Medical School.  According to the correspondence from Dupuy, shortly preceding his 1874 move to Cedar Bayou, Schilling suffered the loss of an eye as the result of a hunting accident and was jilted by a girl he had been engaged to marry. Lacking money necessary to set up his medical practice upon his arrival, Schilling worked in a Cedar Bayou brickyard. He continued doing menial labor until his medical skills were 'discovered' by area residents when he doctored someone hurt in an accident. Schilling first practiced medicine out of the back of a local store. 

The Doctor Takes a Wife

  

In 1883, Dr. Schilling married Linna Gaillard, whose brother, John, owned land in the Goose Creek oil field. Linna Gaillard Schilling taught school at Barbers Hill in 1880. She and Dr. Schilling had two children, John Gaillard Schilling, 1885-1954, and Annie Schilling, 1887-1966. John followed in his father's footsteps and became a doctor, graduating from Galveston Medical School in 1909. He worked alongside his father until 1917. He later moved to Houston where he was a well-known physician and surgeon. Linna considered it her duty and responsibility to remain at home whenever her husband was tending to patients. She acted as his secretary, advising patients who came in search of him of his whereabouts when he was making a house call. If patients had traveled a great distance, she would provide lodging for them in her home so they could be close at hand when the doctor returned. She entertained many patients at her dinner table if they were there during mealtime. She was a kindly good person who raised chickens on the Schilling land, sold eggs, churned butter, and delighted the family with her special fruitcakes on holidays. 

Healing & Home Stood Side by Side

  

The Schillings home was built on the West bank of Cedar Bayou, just across from the Masonic Cemetery, and for a while, the home also served as the doctor's office, until 1890, when he built a separate building for use as an office, near his home. The doctor practiced in the office until his death in 1919. For several years prior to and after Schilling's death, his only son, John, also a doctor, worked in and out of the Cedar Bayou office. After Mrs. Schilling's death in 1923, the couple's daughter, Annie, continued to live in the home and is given credit for preserving her father's office building and its contents which include medical journals of his day, instruments and bottle after bottle of the medicines prescribed by Schilling to his patients. After the 1966 death of Annie Schilling, the doctor's office was donated by Schilling heirs to Chambers County. The building was soon thereafter moved by barge to Anahuac, where it is located near the county courthouse. Today, a Houston Lighting & Power Co. facility is located where the doctor treated the area's sick. Among his patients was the renowned Dr. Ashbel Smith. Included in news accounts about the office's transport to Anahuac are testimonies of the doctor's kind heart and gentle nature. "He was just a good-hearted old fellow-wonderful," J. B. Gourlay said at the time of the building's move. Gourlay, who was 85 years old at the time, said Schilling had been like a father to him. When the doctor became sick in 1919, Gourlay said he stayed with him at the side of his deathbed. Other reports recount that Schilling often was paid for his services with a hot meal, a basket of vegetables, or maybe fruit.


Have Satchel, Will Travel

  

Dr. Schilling treated patients, fitted eyeglasses, dispensed medicines, pulled teeth, performed surgeries, and served as the local veterinarian. He delivered over 1000 babies during his practice years and treated many of the prominent families of the community. Among the recordings in his journal are; the death of Dr. Ashbel Smith at his home in Evergreen on January 21, 1886, and family births of Fishers, Garrett Scotts, Simmons, Mitchells, Gaillards, Kilgores, Joneses, Tabbs Gilettes, and many more. He was busy about 14 hours every day. When it was necessary to make house calls Dr. Schilling did so by horseback when the roads were bad and when they were good he used a one-horse gig, or a two-seated buggy. 

Blessed with wisdom . . .

Defined by Humility & Kindness

  

Schilling filled his office with the latest in medical technology, subscribed to medical journals, used his microscope to do blood smears, and stocked his pharmacy with opium, quinine, belladonna, and strychnine. Many of the medical books used by Schilling can be found at the Historic Schilling Office Building in Anahuac next to the Historic Chambers House. Records the doctor kept on his patients, their reported symptoms, as well as his prescribed treatments, are being preserved by the county's historical commission as well. Stacks of medical journals subscribed to by Schilling, indicating he kept up with all the latest advances, have also been saved. He treated dreaded diseases such as malaria, typhoid fever, tuberculosis, measles, and pneumonia. 


The story is told of an old friend he worked with at the brickyard showing up one day with his half-breed wife and five children. Dr. Schilling hadn't seen his friend, Joe Walters in 30 years, as Joe moved 15 miles northwest to Sheldon right after marrying his wife. That was a pretty long drive in a horse and buggy in those days. Joe made the long buggy drive as he was worried about his family's health and knew his good friend; Dr. Schilling was the best around. Dr. Schilling took them into his clinic and after his examination told Joe he believed they had malaria. He mixed up some medicine that was supposed to cure malaria and sent Joe back to Sheldon telling him he would travel to their place in the morning to check on them. That is exactly what Dr. Schilling did, because that's the kind of doctor and person he enjoyed being. "The old man knew he wouldn't get a penny," said J. B. Gourlay, 65 years later. "He knew he might get dinner, but not a penny!" 

Preparing for a Place of Prominence

  

Annie Schilling, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas Schilling, continued to live in her parent’s home after their death until she sold it to the Houston Lighting and Power Company. The sale made it necessary to move the old doctor’s office building or have it torn down. Unwilling to see the old office that housed their family legacy destroyed, the Schilling heirs donated it to the Chambers County Historical Commission in 1967. Guy C. Jackson, chairman of the Historical Survey Committee, was the ramrod of the re-location of the office. At his request, the Chambers County Commissioner’s Court agreed to designate a site for the historic office on County property near the Chambers County Library in close proximity to the historic Chambers Home. 


Moving the building was no easy task and took the combined efforts of the Sid Desormeaux House Moving Service and Southwest Towing Company, both of Anahuac. Desormeaux’s crew jacked up the old one and one-half story cypress board and batten building near the banks of Cedar Bayou and placed it on a roller frame. 

Bayou, Bay & River . . .

Water Journey to a New Home

It was then rolled onto the steel barge anchored nearby on the banks of Cedar Bayou.  Thus began the slow two-hour water journey across Trinity Bay and up the Trinity River Channel to the docks at the Anahuac landing. 

History in Motion . . .

Relocating a Legacy

The next morning, power and telephone lines were repositioned to make way for the historic doctor’s office as it journeyed uphill from the shell docks to its final home.  The moving expenses were covered by the Schilling Estate with the Anahuac Historical Commission covering the cost of refurbishing the old office.  The building came complete with all the furnishings of the old doctor’s office including his meticulously kept notebooks with writings dating back to lectures during his days in medical school. Also included was his collection of medical journals, surgical instruments, and myriads of medicine bottles.  One special treasure was a tattered 48-star U.S. flag which was the official flag from 1912 to Jan. 1959.  

Amid Concrete and Progress Stands . . .

A Quiet Reminder of Care & Humble Beginnings

  

Amid the ever-changing landscape, with construction of the new justice center looming in the background, the historic 1900s office of Doctor Nicholas T. Schilling stands as a reminder of a time when care was personal, journeys were made by horse and buggy, and physicians’ dedication helped shape the very foundation of the community.

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