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In Sickness
& In Health:
Medicine
in the Old Colony 1620–1920
continues |
During the early 1700s,
the skills of the Old Colony’s physicians and surgeons were challenged
by epidemics of the disfiguring and often deadly smallpox.
Scraps of information about effective folk methods for the
prevention of smallpox found their way to Massachusetts and, in 1721, a
Boston practitioner began to inoculate individuals by inserting into
several small incisions a tiny amount of material taken directly from a
pock of a diseased person. The
result was a mild case of smallpox and total immunity from the disease for
life. Though inoculation was
effective, it was also controversial - until their recovery, those
inoculated could infect others.
Plymouth Town Records for 1721 indicate the presence of the dreaded
disease. A committee was
formed to act with the Selectmen to prevent its spread.
Those who came down with the illness were quarantined and cared for
in private homes but were responsible were paying for their own care.
It was not until 1752 that Town Meeting agreed to build a hospital
or “pest house convenient for the Reception of any Person or Persons
that may be taken sick with the small pox in this Town.”
A new inoculating hospital was built in the early 1770s but in 1776
the town decided the threat was no longer great enough to justify the
dangers of contagion, and ordered that the inoculations at the hospital be
stopped.
Vaccination against smallpox using the much less dangerous matter from
animal pox came along in the 1790s. The
following ad appeared in the Old
Colony Memorial in on January 13, 1827
| Dr. Warren having
procured genuine Kine-Pock Matter will attend to vaccinating any
persons on application at his Office, corner of North St. |
In the
1770s, the skills of the Old Colony’s physicians and surgeons were
challenged once again, this time by the medical needs of wartime.
A member of
the Continental Army during the American Revolution, Dr. James Thacher
(1754-1844) wrote in his journal
| I am obliged to devote the
whole of my time, from eight o'clock in the morning to a late hour
in the evening, to the care of our patients... Amputating
limbs, trepanning fractured skulls, and dressing the most
formidable wounds, have familiarized my mind to scenes of woe. |
James
Thacher of Barnstable had just finished his medical apprenticeship when
war broke out. Shortly after
the Battle of Bunker Hill, Thacher set off to join the Continental Army at
Cambridge. Passing an examination by the medical board, he was awarded the
position of surgeon's mate.
The young
doctor served with the Continental troops in Boston until fall of 1776,
when his regiment moved to New York where he served in a military
hospital. In his journal, he
related the difficulties faced by the American soldiers, from worthless
paper money to harsh winter conditions, "The suffering of the poor
soldiers can scarcely be described... at night they now have a bed of
straw on the ground, and a single blanket each."
James Thacher continued service as a surgeon, traveling to Yorktown
in 1781 where he witnessed the surrender of Cornwallis.
He left the military in 1783 and settled in Plymouth where he
practiced medicine for many years. When his hearing failed in 1809, the
Thacher laid aside his practice and authored numerous medical publications
in the years that followed. Though
“neither a native of Plymouth nor a descendant, his zeal for the
Pilgrims…was second to none.” (Gomes, p.xxxviii in Thacher,1972).
In 1820 Thacher became a founding member and Trustee of the Pilgrim
Society. From the year
Pilgrim Hall was erected (1824) until his death 20 years later, Dr.
Thacher relished his role as first Librarian and Curator.
Dr. Francis LeBaron
(1781–1829), great-grandson of the 17th century Frenchman
mentioned above, served as Apothecary General for the United States
Army’s new Medical Department from 1813-1821.
Called upon to improve the Army’s failed system for providing
medical supplies early in the War of 1812, LeBaron’s impossible task was
doomed by the military’s lack of planning and resources—and further
stymied by poor roads, the long distances that often separated garrisons
from supply centers, the shortage of coins, and general distrust of paper
money.
LeBaron Russell, M.D.
(1814–1889), nephew of the Apothecary General, received his medical
degree from Harvard in 1842. A
passionate abolitionist and philanthropist, Russell supported the New
England Emigrant Aid Company which helped to ensure that Kansas became a
free state (in 1861). During
the Civil War, Russell served as Special Commissioner for the War
Department, examining the living conditions of African American refugees
at Fortress Monroe in Virginia.
The instruments available for surgery during the Civil War were far
superior to those used by Dr. James Thacher and other physicians and
surgeons serving during the Revolutionary War.
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A fine set of surgical
instruments, made in 1864 by Tiemann & Co., Chicago.
Pilgrim Hall
Museum (2003.522) |
Women, of course, had always been midwives, healers, and
“watchers”—someone to watch through the day and night.
Home remedies were common and passed down through generations.
Women often kept favorite culinary and medical recipes in the same
notebook. In the mid–1800s
a small number of women were able to enter programs granting medical
degrees. Pioneering homeopathic physician Mercy Bisbee Jackson of
Plymouth attended the New England Female Medicine College. Mercy graduated in 1860 and was the first woman admitted to
the American Institute of Homeopathy in 1871.
Plymouth’s
Jordan Hospital was not built until 1901; the funds raised by popular
subscription, kicked off by an initial gift from summer resident Eben
Jordan. At that time, the
average life expectancy was under 49 years.
Babies were still delivered at home.
Generally, desperate conditions had to prevail before people would
think of heading to the hospital. Since
that time, the town - and Jordan Hospital - have made great strides.
The town’s medical history was brought up to date by Dr. H.H.
Hamilton in 1977. Raised in the Midwest, he attended medical school in
Boston and having married a New Englander, moved to Plymouth in 1934,
where Dr. Hamilton began his practice in the midst of the Great
Depression. It didn’t take
him long to find Pilgrim Hall, and to become interested in America’s
“Hometown” history.
Selected
Bibliography
Carrell,
Jennifer Lee, The Speckled Monster: A Historical Tale of Battling Smallpox
(NY: Dutton, 2003).
Davis,
William T., Plymouth
memories of an octogenarian. (Plymouth:
The Memorial Press, 1906).
Hamilton,
H. H., A
Medical History of Plymouth 1620-1977 (Plymouth, Pilgrim Society,
1978).
Mayers, Elvoid Clarrice, A Biography of LeBaron Russell: Doctor,
Philanthropist and Humanitarian, unpublished Master’s thesis,
Bridgewater State College, 1976.
O’Connor, Brian W., “Plymouth,” in Aesculapian
Boston, (Boston: Paul Dudley White Medical History Society, 1980).
Tannenbaum, Rebecca J., The Healer’s Calling: Women and
Medicine in Early New England. (Ithaca: Cornell University Press,
2002).
Thacher,
James,
American Medical Biography, (Boston
______ 1828).
____________,
The
American New Dispensatory (Boston: T.B. Wait & Co.,
1810).
____________, History of the Town of Plymouth (Yarmouthport: Parnassus, 1972),
3rd edition with a new introduction by the Rev. Peter Gomes,
Librarian, Pilgrim Society.[1st ed., 1832, 2nd ed.,
1835]
____________,
Military Journal of the American Revolution, from the Commencement to the
Disbanding of the American Army, Hartford, Conn.: Hurlbut,
Williams & Company, 1862. [first published in 1823]
Zimmer, Carl, Soul
Made Flesh (New York: Free Press, 2004). [The story of Thomas
Willis’ study of the brain in the 1600s.]
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