By the time his father died aged 90 on
March 9, 1888, Frederick had developed incurable
cancer of the
larynx , which was finally diagnosed on
November 12, 1887 by the British doctor
Sir Morell Mackenzie. On learning of his illness Frederick said, "To think I should have such a horrid disgusting illness ... I had so hoped to have been of use to my country." Due to a rivalry between the local German doctors and the British doctors favored by Frederick and his wife, difficulties occurred over the proposed treatment of the patient. Doctor Bergman, a German, proposed to remove the larynx completely. His German colleague, Dr.
Virchow, disagreed. Such an operation had never been successfully performed without the death of the patient. Therefore both the Emperor and Empress naturally preferred the treatment suggested by Mackenzie. A cannula was fitted on
February 8 to allow the Emperor to breathe. This operation is called a
tracheotomy. Frederick was unable to speak for the remainder of his life, and communicated through writing. Dr. Bergman almost killed the Emperor by missing the incision in the windpipe and forcing the cannula into the wrong place. This caused the Emperor to cough and cough, and streams of blood appeared. Bergman then proceeded to place his forefinger into the wound to enlarge it. The bleeding only subsided after two hours. The Emperor wrote, "Why did Bergman put his finger in my throat? and later, "Bergman ill-treated me." Bergman's interference resulted in an abscess in the patient's neck creating pus which made the condition more serious. Years later, Bergman tried to prove to his medical students that he could have saved Frederick III by removing his larynx. He attempted that operation, but his patient died under the knife.
In spite of his illness, the Emperor was determined to fulfill his obligations as Emperor. Minutes after writing out the announcement of his accession, he took the ribbon and star of his own
Order of the Black Eagle from his jacket and pinned it on the dress of his wife. He was determined, though gravely ill, to honor the position of his wife as Empress. He also managed to receive
Queen Victoria and the Swedish King, and attend the wedding of his son
Prince Henry to his niece
Princess Irene. Frederick III ruled for only 99 days. Tragically he was unable to realize his plans. He did however force
Robert von Puttkammer to resign on
June 8 when evidence appeared that Puttkammer had interfered in the
Reichstag elections. Dr. Mackenzie wrote of the Emperor that he had "an almost overwhelming sense of the duties of his position." Writing to Lord Napier, the new Empress Victoria wrote of her husband, "The trial laid upon us is a very heavy one ... and it is not easy to meet it with all the courage and the energy necessary... One tries to keep a stout heart, and hopes on, that things might improve! The Emperor is able to attend to his business, and do a great deal, but not being able to speak is, of course, most trying." Finally on
June 15, Frederick III died and was succeeded by his 29 year old son
Wilhelm II. He is buried in a magnificent tomb under a recumbent marble effigy in a mausoleum attached to the
Friedenskirche (Peace Church) in Potsdam.