Veteran Information
Branch of Service: U.S. Navy
Description
Alex. S. Walker. M. D.
Early Life
Dr. Alexander Smith Walker was born on October 5, 1889, in Rye, New York, the son of Charles Henry Walker and Frances Jane Wheeler. A native of Rye, he grew up in a well-established local family and was educated in the area, attending Rye schools and later Greenwich Academy. His early life was shaped by a community with strong civic traditions and increasing professional opportunities in medicine and public service during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Walker pursued higher education at New York University and Bellevue Medical College, entering the medical profession at a time when modern clinical practices and hospital systems were rapidly advancing. By the eve of the First World War, he was already engaged in medical training and practice, positioning him to contribute his professional skills to the national war effort.
World War I Service
On August 22, 1917, Alexander S. Walker was appointed a Lieutenant (junior grade) in the Medical Corps of the United States Naval Reserve Force, entering service shortly after the United States joined World War I. He was assigned to duty at the Receiving Ship in New York beginning August 25, 1917, a key administrative and medical processing center for naval personnel entering service.
In February 1918, he was transferred to the Armed Draft Office at the New York Navy Yard, where he served through April 1919. In this capacity, Dr. Walker contributed to the medical evaluation and processing of sailors and naval recruits during a period of massive wartime mobilization. His work ensured that personnel were properly examined, classified, and prepared for duty, forming an essential part of the Navy’s ability to sustain operations both at home and abroad.
Promoted within the Medical Corps during his service, he remained on duty until resigning his commission on September 10, 1919. His wartime role reflects the critical importance of medical officers in maintaining the health and readiness of the armed forces during a global conflict.
Life After Service
Following his military service, Dr. Walker continued his career in medicine, becoming a respected physician and later specializing as a genitourinary surgeon. He practiced in the New York metropolitan area, including service on the medical boards of Jamaica General, Queens General, and Flushing General Hospitals. His professional life reflected the continued expansion and specialization of American medicine during the mid-twentieth century.
He married Ruth Natalie Wadsworth in 1936, and the couple had one son. Although he later resided in Queens, New York, Walker maintained enduring ties to Rye, where he had been born and ultimately was laid to rest. His lifelong connection to the community underscores the role of Rye as both his place of origin and final resting place.
Dr. Alexander Smith Walker died on March 12, 1969, at the age of seventy-nine in Queens, New York. His career bridged both military and civilian medicine, representing a generation of physicians whose wartime service contributed directly to the effectiveness of the United States Navy during World War I.
Veteran History & Research Links
World War I Military Record
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RYE CHRONICLE
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