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Dr. Philip
Wendall Bernstorf
1914 - 2007

Dr. Philip Wendall Bernstorf, the son of Dr. Philip
Herman and Mona Eva Rucker, was a native of Cheney,
Kansas. He was graduated from
Friends University with
honors, and was a member of the Order of the Tower Honor
Society. He attended
Washington University School of
Medicine and was an Honor graduate and a member of Alpha Omega Alpha
Honor Society and 1st Lieutenant of Medical
ROTC in 1941. Phil saw service in WW II in England, North
Africa and Italy, having active duty with the Army Medical
Corps from 1942 thru 1945. He returned to Wichita,
Kansas and
became a Resident in Medicine at Wichita VA Hospital.
Dr. Bernstorf met Betty Jane James at the VA Hospital
where she served as his Medical Secretary. They were
married in 1949 while he was an instructor at the
Arkansas School of Medicine.
They returned to Wichita the next Christmas, when Dr.
Bernstorf became the Assistant Chief of Medicine at the VA Hospital and
became active with the 89th Reserve Training
Division, later the 89th ARCOM. He retired in
1975 with 33 years service, as a Colonel.
Dr. Bernstorf
is survived by his wife Betty; son, David Bernstorf; and grandchildren Laura (Mrs. Jason Nickel) and
Philip D. Bernstorf.
Memberships
* National Gavel Society
* General Society of Colonial Wars
* National Huguenot Society (Honorary President
General)
* National Society Sons of American Colonists (Honorary
President General)
* National Society Sons of the American Revolution (former
Surgeon
General; Vice President General, South Central District; Vice
President
General, Western Europe)
* National Society Descendants of Early Quakers (Director)
* Colonial Order of the Acorn
* Order of Indian War in the United States (former Surgeon
General)
* General Society Sons of the Revolution
* Order of Americans of Armorial Ancestry
* Welcome Society of
Pennsylvania
* First Families of Ohio
* Flagon & Trencher
* General Society War of 1812
* Guild of Colonial Artisans & Tradesmen, 1607-1783
* Huguenot Society, Founders of Manakin Colony of Virginia
* National Order of Blue & Gray
* National Society Children of American Colonists - Senior
Advisor
* National Society Children of the American Revolution
(Senior National Vice
President General, and the 1st CAR/SAR Gold Appreciation
Medal
Recipient)
* Descendants of the Founders of New Jersey
* National Society Sons &
Daughters of Antebellum Planters
* Sons & Daughters of the Colonial & Antebellum Bench &
Bar 1585-1861
* National Society Sons and Daughters of Pilgrims
* Plantagenet Society
* Society of Washington’s Army at Valley Forge
* Somerset Chapter of Magna Charta Barons
* Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War
Other Notes
Dr. Cramer Reed, a classmate from
Washington U. and 1st Dean of the KU School of
Medicine, Wichita, recruited Phil to help with the
establishment of the School and he taught there, following
his retirement from VA. In 1978 Phil became active with
Sons of the American Revolution where he worked with Dr.
William Reals (a later Dean of KU School of Medicine,
Wichita) and followed Bill as President of Washington
Chapter of KSSSAR.
In 1980 he was invested as a Fellow
in the American College of Physicians. In 1983 he
attended the Treaties of Paris and Versailles Celebration
as an SAR Delegate and then went to Grenoble as a
representative of KU’s beginning Geriatric Program to
attend a “care of the dependent elderly” symposium. He
then became President of the KS Society, later Vice
President General of South Central District, served as
Trustee from Kansas, Switzerland and Germany, as VPG of
Western Europe and served as Surgeon General of the
National Society; was appointed SAR National Chairman of
CAR for nearly 25 years, received the DAR Medal of Honor
and was awarded NSSSAR’s most prestigious award as a
Minute Man. He was elected as a Senior Vice President of
National Society Children of the American Revolution.
He
held membership in a total of 28 lineage societies and had served
as President General of the National Huguenot Society and
as Governor General of Sons of the American Colonists. He
held many committee assignments in many of the societies
in which he was active. He attended the “Hereditary
Fortnightly” in April in
Washington for 25 consecutive years. In March of 2007 at
the KSSSAR State Conference in
Kansas City, he was awarded the first of a new recognition
medal - the C.A.R./SAR Gold Medal of Appreciation - for
his “outstanding dedication” to the workings and operation
between the senior and junior organizations.
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