Background
Adams, Junior. was the son of Zabdiel Boylston Adams and Sarah May Holland.
Adams, Junior. was the son of Zabdiel Boylston Adams and Sarah May Holland.
Zabdiel Adams initially attended Harvard College, but graduated from Bowdoin in 1849. He then entered Harvard Medical School and graduated with an Doctor of Medicine
In 1853. In May 1861, he was commissioned an Assistant Surgeon in the 7th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. He served with the 7th at the battles of Yorktown, Williamsburg, and Fair Oaks. On May 26, 1862, he was commissioned as Head Surgeon for the 32nd Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry.
Although he regained his sight, he was discharged.
He fought hard to get back into the surgical corps after being mustered out, to no avail. By 1864, Adams resorted to an unusual ploy to extend his service.
He gave up battlefield medicine and rejoined the army as an infantry officer, a captain, with the 56th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. Wounded at the Battle of the Wilderness, and captured by Confederate forces, he was eventually paroled and sent to the Union Hospital in Annapolis, Maryland.
Because of his wound, he was discharged from the army.
However, he again reapplied, and rejoined the 56th in February 1865, in time for the Siege of St. Petersburg. He was brevetted Major of the 56th, being promoted for gallantary and meritorious conduct in the assault before St. Petersburg, Virginia. on April 2, 1865. Adams took part in multiple battles, from the Peninsular Campaign to the Battle of Second Bulletin Run, Battle of Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, the Battle of the Wilderness, and, in 1865, the Siege of St. Petersburg, Virginia, that ended the war.
After the war, Adams opened a medical practice in Framingham, Massachusetts.
He died after falling over the Metropolitan Water Works dam in Southborough in 1902 and is buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts. There are some 2,000 memorials on the Civil War battlefield in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
Only one is dedicated to a physician: Doctor Zabdiel Boylston Adams.
Adams, according to his great-grandson Mitchell L. Adams, a former member of Harvard’s Board of Overseers, labored so long in surgeries at the Battle of Gettysburg — remaining on duty for two days and three nights — that he temporarily became blind with exhaustion.