A group of children are playing in…
April 1788 CE
Bayley's chief focus in his medical practice is the poor of the city.
He had helped to found the New York Dispensary, which will operate in the Greenwich Village neighborhood well into the twentieth century.
He is the first American surgeon to successfully amputate an arm at the shoulder.
By 1783, Bayley had begun performing cataract surgery
Born and bred in Connecticut, Bayley had received his medical education in England, where body-snatching is more common.
There are whispers about him “cutting up his patients and performing cruel experiments upon the sick”.
The student, named John Hicks, waves the arm out at the children, telling a boy whose mother had recently died that it belonged to her.
The boy runs home and tells his father of this, who, after exhuming his wife's coffin and finding it empty, amasses a group of concerned citizens who march to the hospital and begin to mass around the building on April 13.
The mob eventually breaksinto the hospital and, after becoming incensed upon finding several bodies in various stages of mutilation, pulls Richard Bayley's assistant Wright Post and a number of his students into the street, where the mayor of New York City, James Duane intervenes and orders them escorted to the jailhouse for protection.
A crowd of two thousand people gathers, and news spreads of the horrors seen in the hospital, leading to widespread rioting, with the few physicians remaining in New York City being forced into hiding.
A large group of rioters descends upon Broadway, searching for John Hicks, who is felt by the crowd to be the main source of blame.
As they assemble in front of the courthouse, throwing rocks, militia and cavalry are called in to repel them.
The riot lasts a few days, ceasing on April 15 when Governor Clinton sends the militia to patrol the streets until a calm environment is ensured.
At least three rioters and three militiamen die in the confrontation; some estimate up to twenty dead.
The protesters also destroy all the available human specimens.