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LOBLOLLY BOY

A 'loblolly boy' in 18th and 19th century warships was essentially a non-professional assistant to the ship's surgeon. The rating has been mentioned in C. S. Forester's Horatio Hornblower novels, as well as Patrick O'Brian's ''Aubrey-Maturin'' novels. Stephen Maturin's loblolly boy, Padeen, is involved in important subplots spanning several of O'Brian's books.
Because of the novels and movies, the loblolly boy is popularly thought to be crewmember of the Royal Navy, and indeed the term appears in the Royal Navy as early as 1597. However, the rating of loblolly boy also was given in U.S. Navy warships in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, until 1861 when the name was changed to 'surgeon's steward', reflecting higher training requirements. The name was changed to 'apothecary' in 1866, and changed again in the 1870s to 'bayman', until medical science at the turn of the 20th century improved enough to make the position much more skilled, renaming it 'Hospital Corpsman'. Across the Atlantic, the Royal Navy name for the rating changed to 'sick berth attendant' in 1833, with the nickname 'Sick Bay Tiffy' (Tiffy being slang for Artificer) gaining popularity in the 1890s.
The name itself comes from the serving of loblolly -- a thick, goopy porridge, sometimes with chunks of meat or vegetables -- to sick or injured crewmembers to speed their recovery. Loblolly, in turn, probably comes from the fusion of 'lob', a Yorkshire term meaning to boil or bubble, and 'lolly', an archaic English word for a stew or soup. Loblolly itself eventually came to mean anything sticky and goopy, such as a swamp or bog, and terms such as the Loblolly pine were coined from the muddy habitat of the tree rather than any (dubious) culinary value of the tree's parts.
The loblolly boy's duties included serving the aforementioned loblolly, but also anything that a ship's surgeon was too busy (or of too high of station) to do. This ranged from holding down patients during surgery, obtaining and cleaning tools, disposing of amputated limbs, and carrying out what is euphemistically today called "bedpan duty". Additionally, the loblolly boy performed inventory control of herbs, medicines, and medical supplies.

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Sources and references

Sources and references



BBC Channel 4 ''The Worst Jobs in History''

Michael Quinion's etymology of "loblolly boy"

U.S. Navy Hospital Corps History

Random House ''Word of the Day''

History of the Royal Navy Medical Branch

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