Dr. John Loudon – Troy’s 2nd Physician

Troy from Mount Ida (*)/ painted by W.G. Wall ; engraved by I.R. Smith ; finished by J. Hill. Available for download at loc.gov (the Library of Congress) -*appears to be from Mt. Olympus not Ida, and is a view of Troy etched the year of Loudon’s death, 1820.

Dr. John  Loudon, (1760-1820), the second physician to arrive in Troy, became an important early member of the landowning dignitaries in Troy, known for his generosity and kindness to those with little with which to pay for care. As we shall see, he also took a robust interest in matters of religion.

I have written before of Loudon’s “dream of pigeons,” which seems to have persuaded his very reluctant brother-in-law, Jacob D. Vanderheyden, to let the Methodists buy the land our buildings now sit on. This same landowner had previously either donated land for other denominations, or sold them for one dollar.The fact that only the Methodists had to pay top rate (plus interest in the form of rental until paid off) is  one of the many signs of the distrust with which the denomination was treated in the late 18th and early 19th century. Loudon’s dream, when he had not yet officially joined the Methodist Episcopal Church, became such a legend that fifty years after his death,various newspapers nationwide were still reporting the dream story. The Cincinnati Daily , on December 8th, 1873, reported:  “The Troy Press says that the site of the State Street ME Church was selected ‘because of a dream’ upward of 50 years ago as reported by Dr. John Louden, a prominent physician(…) who was a leading member and worker of the Methodist denomination(…) the good doctor dreamed he saw a flock of white doves alight on the corner of State and Fifth Streets. The impression was so vivid that the doctor could not shake it off…”.

The seriousness with which Loudon took his decision to join the Methodist movement, despite it being deemed at best unseemly, and dangerous at worst, has left us with documentation on how much emphasis people of the time put on their spiritual wellbeing. At a time when people choose a church, if they choose one at all, on the speed the priest can get through the mass, the ability of the band, or its political bent, the idea of such theological heart-searching seems quite alien.

Loudon was born in 1760 in  Dungur, county Antrim, Ireland, of Scottish parents. Sylvester writes: “John Loudon, M. D., on his settlement in Troy as a physician and surgeon made himself known to the public by advertising in the American Spy, published in Lansingburgh, the following card: “The subscriber, having finished the studies of physic, surgery, and man midwifery at the University of Edinburgh, and practiced in Europe for some years past, now offers his services to the inhabitants of Troy. John Loudon, Troy, Feb. 14, 1793.”  (p.136) He soon began to work alongside Dr. Gale, Troy’s first physician. In 1794,  working together, the two doctors treated a  smallpox outbreak,and were reportedly “extremely successful.” They estimated Troy’s population as being 400 and 500 at that point.

A.J.Weise, in the History of the City of Troy from the Expulsion of the Mohegan Indians to the present Centennial year of independence of the United States of America , 1886  (pp 82-3) recounts a story in the Troy Gazette of July 8, 1806, which reminds us how different life in the new settlement was: “It was not an uncommon sight to see bands of wandering Indians in the streets of the village at this day. The Stockbridge tribe was more generally represented than any other of the aboriginal people of Northern New York, for they were claimants of the territory of Reensselaerwyck on the eastern side of the Hudson River, and in this respect were more in favor with the people than the Mohawks of the western side(…) On Friday, 4 July in this village two Indians we believe in the Stockbridge tribe, fell into dispute(…) Participating largely in the liberty and liquor, which usually warms the breasts of independent and unshackled patriots of all professions on the Fourth of July, and not submitting themselves to any laws, they fell into fighting.”  The elder stabbed the younger one,  who then attacked the elder one with a heavy stone, breaking his skull and beating him with his bow. Bystanders thought him dead, but after  a few minutes, he got up and walked away. Having been committed to jail, Dr. John Louden was sent for and he “trepanned the skull of the older Indian, and removed the broken parts.” The ultimate fate of the man is unreported.

The same author in his book, “Troy’s 100 Hundred Years” wrote: “I could name a number of individuals who would be an acquisition to any place, such as (…) Dr John Loudon” one of the 10 names he mentions ( p 46). Loudon had quickly become a respected member of the community. At various times he was a fire warden, village trustee, assistant alderman when Troy was first made a city, a (Methodist) church trustee, previously an elder in the Presbyterian Church, and surgeon for the 1st Regiment, 2nd brigade, under Gilbert Eddy. He was married twice but there is no evidence of him having any surviving children

Like the majority of early arrivals in Troy, Loudon was Presbyterian, and had been a keen student of religion since his teenage years. Like many others he had grown up within strict Scottish Presbyterian traditions: John Knox studied with John Calvin in Geneva in the 16th century, and created the Church of Scotland – the Scottish Presbyterian church – when he returned home. The first dedicated religious building was a small white wooden building in what is now Sage Park, at the corner of Congress Street and 2nd Street.  As Troy grew, numerous other Presbyterian churches sprung up, many a couple of hundred yards from another. Gradually other denominations built buildings – the Baptists, Episcopalians and Quakers all built early places of worship. In 1808, the Methodists who had been meeting in private homes in and around State Street for 15 years, decided they wanted to build on a lot beside the common land at Fifth Street (now Avenue.) When they asked to buy the lot, the owner, Jacob D. Vanderheyden refused but John Loudon secured the purchase through his compelling dream – and family influence (his second wife, Blandina Owen, was the sister of Vanderheyden’s second wife, Mary).

Was Dr. Loudon already intrigued by Methodist challenges to Calvin? He would of course have known some of Troy’s leading businessmen who were Methodists, even working in official village business alongside them: Stephen Andres, Le Grand Cannon, Mahlon Taylor, Oliver Boutwell and Samuel Goodrich, the principal of the small school which stood in what is now Sage Park. Did he meet some of the very early but dedicated Irish Methodists before he emigrated? Or was he simply aware that his brother-in-law was singling out this one group in a prejudicial way and it offended his sense of fair play? We cannot know, unless something written by him comes to light. Either way, he came to the aid of the small Methodist society and they were successful in getting the land, even if they paid exorbitantly for it.

Less than two years later, Loudon relinquished his membership in the Presbyterian Church and became a Methodist. The letters he wrote to his Presbyterian pastor, Troy’s first clergyman, Dr. Coe, and his Presbyterian congregation, became the basis for a long obituary written by William Ross. It was  published in two parts in the Methodist Review magazine in May and August of 1820, within weeks of his death. The article shows the serious way Loudon made his decision and his careful study of the pertinent differences between the thinking of Calvin and Wesley. Loudon may have been unusual in explaining his thought process as he surrendered his title of elder in the Presbyterian Church, but from the few hints we get from the journals and the books held dear by early Methodists, clergy and lay, his understanding of the theory of religion was not unique: people wanted to be sure their soul was right with almighty God, and they wanted to know it for themself.

So here are some of Loudon’s own words on why he was renouncing a Calvinist world view, for an Arminian understanding (Jan Arminius was  a Dutch Reformed Church theologian and influencer of John Wesley.) If you want to know a little bit more about what Loudon is discussing here, or to understand his points, I have posted immediately before this article, on this website, a comparison of Calvinist and Armenian thought in modern language,  and includes links to more information.)

In 1810, after sending this letter, Dr. Loudon joined the State Street Methodists. Ross quotes him: “I beg your attention for a few moments, while I address you as the congregation of this church. By your appointment, I’ve had the honor of holding the office of Elder among you, I now resign that office to you, because I cannot in conscience hold the doctrines, which are taught in this church, and which are supported by the Session in general. In the first place, they say God directs by his sovereign agency all things. To this, I reply: though God is the author of every good and perfect gift, yet he neither determines nor directs the sins of any of his creatures.… In the second place, they held that God in the dispensation of his grace through Jesus Christ gives two kinds of grace, the one sovereign and special, and the other common. To this, I answer the grace of God, which brings salvation has appeared unto all  men and there are not two kinds of grace, one real, and the other counterfeit, but there is but one kind. It may differ in degree but not in equality (…)They say in the third place, that having received a special grace, they never can fall from it, nor make shipwreck of their faith. In answer to this, I would refer you to all the cautions and admonitions given to the church.(…) To differ in some speculative points and religion has been common in all periods of the church; but for members of the same church to differ in the first and most essential principles of religion, has not been so common.“

Loudon then expanded on these points, adding quotations from the Bible, for each objection. 

In the following month’s magazine, the obituary continued with comments on Loudon’s character. Ross writes: “He first became acquainted with the Methodist in this city (…) When he joined us, our church in this place was inconsiderable and obscure(…) Both as a private citizen, and as a practicing physician, he was highly respected. As a citizen in common life, he endeavored to promote peace, propriety, and good order, in every department of society. This he did, not only by precepts, but also by examples of sobriety, industry, and economy. He was a lover of peace; – honesty, plainness, and candour were conspicuous traits in his character. As a physician, he was deservingly honored, not only on account of his knowledge of the healing art, but in consequence of a judicious and successful application of that knowledge. And without derogating from others of the same profession, it may be said he was the poor man’s doctor. Let the poor of Troy testify how often he has entered the habitations, lighted up the lamp of hope, and the blessing of God, restored health to the sick without money and without price. But this is not the best, Dr. Loudon was a Christian. And in him, the Christian graces shone with particular luster(…) Such was the confidence we had in his integrity, that he was considered as a pillar in the church, and as a father in the congregation of the Saints(…) He was, however, particularly united in Christian affection to those with whom he was connected in church fellowship(…) In life and in death he evinced a laudable desire for the temporal, as well as spiritual, prosperity of the church.— For a series of years, he gave liberally of his earthly substance for the support of religious worship, and for the comfort of the servants of Christ, who were engaged in spreading the influence of evangelical truth. And as a monument of his benevolence in death, we are now in possession of a good dwelling-house, together with necessary appurtenances, designed to be a permanent residence for the minister stationed in Troy.

Ross concludes: “Although God had given him a robust constitution, yet his exposures in the performance of his professional duties were so frequent and great, that a number of times he was brought to the borders of the grave.“  In fact, Loudon had contracted tuberculosis in the exercise of his duty, and a few months before his death, a heavy cold had made his condition worse. For his last four weeks he was bed-bound, where, we are told, he was visited by “people of all classes” with whom he spoke about spirituality. He died in his 60th year, on Saturday,  February 12th 1820, at his residence on the northeast corner of Second and Ferry Streets, where his widow lived for twenty years after his death. The Central Library is now at that location.

Dr. Loudon had a considerable list of property from his large practice in and around Troy. The handwritten inventory, which is in the collection of the Hart-Cluett Museum,  lists all his possessions at the time of his death. It includes many pages of furnishings, household goods, clothing (6 nightcaps!), and a list of debtors, which show that he loaned money to people as diverse as church members and city entrepreneurs with business ideas, to widows needing help with daily expenses. He also owned several  properties at that time: the house he reportedly donated to the church was at 141 3rd Street, and had previously been his surgery.

A few years before his death, Loudon had been named to a committee to organize the laying out of a new cemetery. That plot was plowed over by the city around 1990. It seems possible Loudon and his wife, along with many early Methodists were buried there, as were  other Vanderheydens, as many of those early names do not occur in surviving cemeteries, or appear as names of those reinterred when cemetery land was re-purposed. The cemetery is now a patch of empty ground at the end of Cypress Street, just off Congress Street, and is flanked by the Poestenkills Gorge and Falls, and Prospect Park.

Janet Douglass, Troy, May 2026.

The disused cemetery was the subject of a YouTube video by Dr Rubinstein, who has researched many such areas in the city.  Search his videos on You Tube under Dr RGST: The Cultural Historian.

The books and magazine quoted are all available online and can be read without charge:

Methodist magazine ran 1818-1828 and is available on Google Books, as are 

Troy’s 100 years by A.J. Weise, 1891, and The History of the City of Troy, from the expulsion of the Mohegan Indians to the present centennial year of the independence of the United States of America, also  by A.J. Weise, 1876.

A History of Rensselaer County by Nathaniel Bartlett Sylvester,1880 

Troy and Rensselaer County, New York; a History: by Rutherford Hayner, 1925 are available at archive.org, the Internet Archive of the Library of Congress

The Hart-Cluett Museum is located on 2nd Street in downtown Troy and researchers can be book time in the Research Library, by going to their website: hartcluett.org 

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Reed Brockway Bontecou (1824 – 1907)

Stories from the lives of members of the State Street Methodist Episcopal Church

The gravestone of Reed Brockway Bontecou M.D. in Oakwood Cemetery, Troy, NY.

While the Cluett family, which played such an important part in the history of Christ Church, is now probably the best remembered name locally, on a national scale the most renowned person, by far, would be Dr. Reed Brockway Bontecou.

Dr. Bontecou’s name appears in medical journals dealing with surgery techniques and the beginnings of plastic surgery, in photographic journals detailing his photographs from the Civil War, and on Civil War and veteran sites, because of the pioneering nature of his surgical methods and how he recorded them in photos at such an early date of the craft. A few years ago, the Hart-Cluett Museum in Troy had a whole exhibit dedicated to Dr. Bontecou and displayed his medical bag.

In terms of the history of Christ Church, United Methodist in Troy, his lifetime spans all three of the buildings that have stood on State Street between the Williams Street alley and 5th Avenue, growing up in a devoted Methodist family. 

He was descended from Pierre Bontecou, a French Huguenot, who was linked to Dutch Protestants before him. Pierre arrived in New York City as a refugee from the regime of King Louis XIV in the late 1600’s, and the family originally worshipped in a French speaking Huguenot (protestant) church. One branch of the family ended up in New Haven, CT. They were industrious and successful, but like many in the area suffered financially and physically at the hands of the British during the struggle for independence. This brought one branch of the Bontecous to the “village of Lansingburgh”  in the late 1780s. Subsequently, Peter Bontecou, father of Dr. Reed Brockway Bontecou, was brought to Coeymans by his parents. But when still “a young lad” he removed to Troy to work as a clerk in a shoe store. He later became the proprietor.

Peter was a lifelong and ardent Methodist. Whether he heard about Methodism when he arrived in Troy, or had already made contact with the dedicated group already established in Albany County, we do not know. However, our records show he was a leader of State Street Methodist from its earliest days until his death in 1868. The family genealogist describes him as “cold and austere in manner, and strictly honest in all his dealings; a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and a great student of theological works.“

Reed was his first child. He had married Samantha Brockway in Troy in 1823. A year later he had a motherless infant son. Samantha’s death 2 weeks after giving birth was credited by some historians for Reed becoming a physician. 

Even as a child, Reed was studious, with a naturally curious, scientific mind. When a boy, he started a collection of sea shells and he noted the similarities and differences as he catalogued them. According to the History of Rensselaer Co., New York by Nathaniel Bartlett Sylvester, published in 1880, he attended the “High School Academy” then Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and then graduated M. D. from the Castleton Medical College, VT. At the age of 22 years, between attending RPI and medical school, he went on a year-long voyage up the Amazon to study. He was married, on July 18, 1849, to Susan Northrup and they went on to have 5 children. 


In 1857, at the Troy Hospital, Bontecou “ligated the right subclavian artery for diffuse traumatic aneurysm of the axillary artery, the first successful case in America and one of the first three on record” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reed_Brockway_Bontecou

 In 1861, he left his physician’s practice to become the medical officer of the Second Volunteer Infantry of New York. Within 3 months he was running the Fortress Monroe military hospital and then was asked to lead Harewood Hospital in DC, which he left at its closure in 1866. By that time he had been brevetted lieutenant-colonel and colonel of volunteers for his faithful and meritorious services during the war. 

He returned to Troy and became the assistant surgeon at the Watervliet Arsenal, resident surgeon at Marshall’s Infirmary off Hill Street in South Troy, and had a private medical practice for four more decades. He is quoted in numerous coroner’s reports in Troy and area newspapers, was an official examiner for those seeking Civil War pensions, and held a number of prestigious positions in medical societies. He published reviews of his work and inventions, which included a special kit for soldiers to take with them into battles to self-treat a wound until help arrived, greatly increasing their chance of survival.

His name appears in the works of Arthur Weise who published several books on Troy in addition to Sylvester’s history of Rensselaer County. The Hart Cluett Museum had a display about his life and work, a few years ago, and displayed his medical bag.

According to the site dedicated to medical collections: “Bontecou’s peers respected ‘his unselfish character, his strict devotion to the truth, his extreme modesty and his unswerving fidelity to his students, colleagues and friends,’ noted one physician. Another doctor called him, ‘the Napoleon of Surgeons.’ “ That site hosts a long article, with illustrations, and catalogs his medical achievements. It is entitled: “Dr. Reed Bontecou’s Pocket Surgical Wallet, Bloodstained from the First Recorded Battlefield Amputation in the Civil War, on a Soldier of the 5th New York (Duryee Zouaves) And the Coins Driven into a Soldier’s Groin by a Bullet!”

The “Faces of the Civil War” blog has an entry entitled “The Napoleon of Surgeons” about Bontecou. http://facesofthecivilwar.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-napoleon-of-surgeons.html

In addition to the medical sites, he is remembered on historical photography sites for his pioneering use of the art as a documentary tool during the Civil War. This site has the most extensive descriptions of those achievements:

One of the largest online collections of his photographs can be found at: 

https://www.robertandersongallery.com/gallery/reed-bontecou/

The site says: “Reed Bontecou was responsible for pioneering, and taking, the largest number of photographs of wounded soldiers during the Civil War and was the single largest contributor of photographs and specimens to the Army Medical Museum and medical publications of the time. His close up images of surgery, anesthesia, and patients posing with their pathological specimens were unique to his time.”

Just a few of the many sites which speak of Dr. Bontecou, for all his great qualities, do recount a lapse of judgment and somewhat of a fall from grace, in a situation that caused his wife Susan Northrup Bontecou to file for divorce.  Details are few. One site (the Faces of the Civil War blog,) quotes a New York Times report that Susan’s accusation was “criminal intimacy”- the term used for an affair with a married person – and gives two names for the woman involved. All other references state simply that they divorced because of his affair with a young woman. For now we will leave it at this: in the strict society of his day, and doubtless among his colleagues and social group, this brief affair must have been quite a scandal, and stirred up much gossip once divorce proceedings began, but I have found few references to it.* What we do know is that, despite the embarrassment and notoriety, Dr. Bontecou did not leave the city in disgrace and his career does not seem to have been radically changed by the events. He continued to be a member – and head of – various esteemed organizations and to work with the military, at Marshall Infirmary and in private practice in Troy. The divorce was finalized in 1883. He never remarried.

Bontecou died in 1907. He is buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Troy.

(The photograph was taken by the author on 4th July, 2025. The headstone is very unusual, and I have not seen another in the century which is uncarved rock.)

Other interesting articles:

https://spotsylvaniacw.blogspot.com/2013/07/podcast-battlefield-photography-of-dr.html

https://www.hartcluett.org/rensselaer-county-blog/dreadful-accident?rq=bontecou

https://www.seekingmyroots.com/members/files/G000711.pdf

Bontecou genealogy, which starts with the amazing maritime adventures of a famous Dutch family member. 

The FindaGrave website includes additional details of his Civil War Service I have not seen elsewhere and photos of the doctor, in uniform and on horseback. 

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7050830/reed-brockway-bontecou

*Ron Coddington’s blog: Faces of the Civil War  says: “Susan Northrup (1828-1911) and Bontecou married in 1849. She alleged criminal intimacy between her husband and Emma Josephine Murray, also known as Emma Brockway. According to the 1870 U.S. Census, she is the daughter of Reed Brockway. There may be a genealogical connection between this branch of the Brockway family and that of Bontecou’s mother, Samantha Brockway Bontecou (1803-1824). New York Times, November 28, 1883.”  As I started to research the matter, errors in family trees made the strands of the tale hard to untangle for this essay: I may go back to researching who this Emma was, as the only Emma in the family was never known as “Emma Josephine Murray” – even a little research has thrown up other inconsistencies with even that brief account and no interest in the story in local newspapers so far – Janet