[Congressional Bills 117th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 18 Introduced in House (IH)]
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117th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. RES. 18
Honoring the life of Dr. Frank Erdman Boston as a World War I veteran,
military surgeon, community doctor, and founder of the Elm Terrace/
Abington Lansdale Hospital and the Volunteer Medical Service Corps
(VMSC) ambulance corps.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
January 5, 2021
Mr. Fitzpatrick (for himself, Mr. Evans, Ms. Wild, Ms. Houlahan, and
Ms. Dean) submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the
Committee on Oversight and Reform
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RESOLUTION
Honoring the life of Dr. Frank Erdman Boston as a World War I veteran,
military surgeon, community doctor, and founder of the Elm Terrace/
Abington Lansdale Hospital and the Volunteer Medical Service Corps
(VMSC) ambulance corps.
Whereas Mr. Boston attended Lincoln University, originally established as The
Ashmun Institute, the Nation's first degree-granting historically Black
college and university;
Whereas subsequently, Dr. Boston attended the Medico-Chirurgical College, an
outgrowth of the Medico-Chirurgical Society of Philadelphia which merged
with the University of Pennsylvania Medical College and Jefferson
Medical College;
Whereas when World War I began, Dr. Boston enlisted and was immediately given
the rank of first lieutenant in the Army Medical Reserve Corps;
Whereas African-American recruits, including Dr. Boston, were sent for medical
training at the Medical Officers Training Camp, Fort Des Moines, Iowa;
Whereas after completing his training, Dr. Boston was assigned as a medical
officer with the 317th Engineers Regiment of the 92d Division of the
American Expeditionary Forces;
Whereas Dr. Boston's division fought bravely across France and in the bloody
Meuse-Argonne Offensive, the largest operation of the American
Expeditionary Forces in World War I;
Whereas the Meuse-Argonne Offensive was the deadliest campaign in American
history, resulting in more than 26,000 soldiers killed in action and
more than 120,000 total casualties;
Whereas during his tour of duty, Dr. Boston treated soldiers while under aerial
and gas attack;
Whereas Dr. Boston served in France with the rank of captain and ended his
military service as a major;
Whereas after the war, Dr. Boston returned to work in Philadelphia and later
settled in Lansdale where he opened the Elm Terrace Hospital, which was
later renamed North Penn Hospital and subsequently became part of the
Abington Jefferson Health Systems;
Whereas Dr. Boston also formed a First Aid Emergency Squad in Lansdale,
eventually known as the Volunteer Medical Service Corps of Lansdale;
Whereas, as a Boy Scout official, Dr. Boston served as chairman of Health and
Safety for the General Nash District, Valley Forge Scout Council;
Whereas Dr. Boston was a member of the Reserve Officers Association of Military
Surgeons, the Montgomery County Medical Society, and the American
Medical Association;
Whereas Dr. Boston died February 8, 1960, at 69 years of age, and was buried in
Lansdale; and
Whereas Jefferson Health and Abington Lansdale Hospital, along with the Borough
of Lansdale, are honoring Dr. Boston, and a mural is being planned for
the Lansdale Borough Hall: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representative honors the life of Dr.
Frank Erdman Boston as a World War I veteran, military surgeon,
community doctor, and founder of the Elm Terrace/Abington Lansdale
Hospital and the Volunteer Medical Service Corps (VMSC) ambulance
corps.
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