Digital Highlights: South for Health

“Sick people have but a single wish–that they may get well…” William Francis Hutchinson of Rhode Island starts his Under the Southern Cross: a guide to the sanitariums and other charming places in the West Indies and Spanish Main with a clear indication of his intended direction and audience: having benefited himself from travel in southern hemisphere, he intends to provide guidance for others. The title page provides Hutchinson a boost by adding, after his name, a list of memberships: the American Climatological Association, the American Medical Association, and the American Public Health Association.

Hutchinson makes a point of mentioning how many conditions can be helped by tropical travel including simply exhaustion — but doctors are too prone, he feels, to prescribe such travel to anyone who can pay for it: “Careful and thorough consideration should precede decision where to send invalids for climate treatment.” (17)

Despite this demurrer, Hutchinson writes as one in love with his surroundings, describing beaches, hotels and quiet nights with the pleasure of the true convert. He illustrates his book, too, both with photographs and personal sketches of plants and places.

Flip through the pages of Hutchinson’s book below or follow this link to read Under the Southern Cross.

Digital Highlights: “Plain Home Talk”

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Illustration from Part IV of Foote’s “Plain Home Talk.”

Edward B. Foote’s Plain home talk about the human system, published in 1870, is one of the large number of nineteenth century home advice manuals. Such manuals usually covered a wide variety of topics, potentially including not only medical advice, but also notes on home brewing, child-rearing, animal husbandry, and cooking.

Plain home talk doesn’t include any of these topics, but does not focus on disease and curatives either. Foote has an axe to grind on the subject of sexual education and modern family structure.

Foote’s entry into the genre has an incredibly detailed table of contents that starts off predictably enough with “Disease–Its [sic] Causes, Prevention, and Cure” with subsections on the causes of disease, the problems in contaminated food, and “the bad habits of children and youth.” Foote then goes on to the Prevention of Disease and Common Sense Remedies. In Part III of the book, he branches out into what he calls “plain talk,” what might be called now sex ed or family planning: The Sexual Organs, History of Marriage, and the Demerits of Monogamy. Part IV details his suggestions for the improvement of marriage, starting with a long disquisition on the importance of adaptation (the couple to each other) in marriage.

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

 

Digital Highlights: Cannon and Social Work

Medical social work was a burgeoning field in the early decades of the twentieth century; what might now be considered a ‘holistic approach’ to medicine — dealing with the patient’s social background, life experience, job, and so on — was beginning to be regarded as a necessary corollary to medical treatment.

Ida M. Cannon published her Social Work in Hospitals in 1913 which, with the benefit of hindsight, seems to be unfortunate timing; within a year for many of her reading audience, the question will be numbers of hospital beds, recovery facilities, and medical staff, not so much how they treat their patients in a social context. Cannon followed her brother, Walter Bradford, to Boston from the family home in Minnesota. She supplemented her nursing education in Boston at the School for Social Workers and went on to work with Doctor Richard C. Cabot at the Massachusetts General Hospital. In 1914, a year after the publication of her book, she was named Chief of Social Service at the hospital; she held the position for over thirty years.

In her book, Cannon gives a brief overview of the history of medical social work starting with religious communities and their historical role as supporters of the sick. She presents the social worker as a valuable adjunct to the physician, able to interact with the patient in different ways and supplement medical care with social assistance.

Flip through the pages of Cannon’s book below or follow this link to read Social Work in Hospitals.

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

Digital Highlights: New York Journal of Medicine

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Chest x-rays illustrating an article on pulmonary abscess from 1922 New York Journal of Medicine.

New titles from our National Endowment for the Humanities-funded grant to digitize medical journals are going up in our collection on the Internet Archive regularly.

A recent addition is the New York Medical Journal, in a run from 1865 to 1922. The 1865 volume includes an obituary on Abraham Lincoln and articles, notes, and communications on abortion, uterine surgery, scurvy, and diabetes. The volume itself is set in close type with narrow margins. There is no obvious front page graphic or header to identify the journal and it plunges directly into its first article without preamble or introduction.

The 1922 volume, by comparison, includes a very polished title page and front page header. The title page identifies three other titles — the Medical Record, the Philadelphia Medical Review, and the Medical News — which are presumably being published as part of the Journal title. As an odd parallel, the first article in the 1922 volume is also about gynecological surgery, in this case about the use of radium for certain conditions.

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

 

Digital Highlights: Artificial Limbs

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Illustration of artificial leg.

The rise in demand for artificial limbs — hands, legs, feet, and arms — after the American Civil War can readily be imagined. Recent scholarship in medical history has explored the medical care of the time.

For those who survived serious battlefield wounds, substitutes had to be provided and entrepreneurs in the field stepped forward; among them, was Marks’ Patent Artificial Limbs which issued a small pamphlet in 1867 advertising its wares, announcing the recent winning of a gold medal prize, and offering many testimonials from surgeons and patients of the excellence of the Marks’ limbs.

The writer of the pamphlet clearly does not want to be labelled as a war profiteer; he says early and often that he is drawing on the experience of fourteen years in the business of artificial limbs. He even takes it upon himself to give some advice to surgeons as to the best way to perform amputations with an eye to fitting with a suitable replacement limb after healing.

You can read the entire pamphlet here or look through more of the Medical Heritage Library’s resources on Civil War medicine.

Digital Highlights: For the Fourth…

If you happen to be in the United States, you may be aware that this Friday is the Fourth of July, a traditional celebration of barbecue, fireworks, and sunburn.

In case you feel like lashing out and making your own fireworks (if it’s legal where you are, of course!), we’ve gotcha covered.

Flip through the pages above or follow this link to read James Cutbush’s A system of pyrotechny : comprehending the theory and practice, with the application of chemistry : designed for exhibition and for war : in four parts, containing an account of the substances used in fire-works : the instruments, utensils, and manipulations : fire-works for exhibition : and military pyrotechny : adapted to the military and naval officer, the man of science, and the artificer (1825).

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

Digital Highlights: “The American Instructor,” or: How to Do A Little Bit of Everything

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Frontispiece picture of “The American Instructor.”

The American Instructor promises to teach a little bit of everything except, perhaps, how to have a successful marriage: The American instructor, or, Young man’s best companion : containing, spelling, reading, writing and arithmetic, in an easier way than any yet published ; and how to qualify any person for business, without the help of a master ; instructions to write variety of hands … ; how to write letters on business or friendship ; forms of indentures … releases, &c. ; also merchant’s accompts, and a short and easy method of shop and book-keeping ; with a description of the several American colonies ; together with the carpenter’s plain and exact rule … ; likewise the practical gauger made easy … ; to which is added, The poor planter’s physician … and also prudent advice to young tradesmen and dealers ; the whole better adpated to these American colonies, than any other book of the like kind.

In 1770, this must have seemed like quite a deal: over 400 pages of instructions in one book. The author even takes the time to explain that the book has been specially edited for an American audience; information from a “British” edition that was of no relevance to North America has been left out. One wonders what a book like this would look like if written in 1780.

The opening section, on how “…to spell, read, and write True English” is a glimpse at the standardization and codification of the English language: there are paragraphs describing the silent ‘g,’ as in ‘reign’ and ‘sign’ and lists of words which must be written with a particular letter; for example, ‘cinnamon’ calls for ‘c’ although ‘s’ has the same sound.

Flip through the pages below or follow this link to read The American Instructor.

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

Digital Highlights: Poetic Cookery

After noticing the Poetical cook-book while putting together our new title round-up earlier in the week, I couldn’t resist having a flip through the pages. Perhaps I might find a guaranteed mnemonic for how to cook brown rice: a thing I never can recall when I need to.

Published in 1864 by Maria J. Moss, the volume opens with a brief disclaimer by the author. Written originally as a ‘pastime,’ she feels the pages have received a wider importance during the Civil War and now dedicates the publication to the Philadelphia 1864 Sanitary Fair.

For those of us hoping for rhyming cooking instructions, the book then continues very hopefully with a lengthy introduction in verse:

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Moss describes the fate of the poor and the good cook and even manages to reference a pair of odd culinary happenings from the time of Charles I: the knighting of a loin of beef and the presentation of an eighteen-inch tall man in a pie.

Flip through the whole book below or follow this link to Maria Moss’ Poetical cook-book.

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

New to the MHL!

Have you checked out the latest additions to the MHL? We have Naval oral histories and lots of cookbooks this week!

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

Digital Highlights: Elizabeth Packard Ware, Asylum Activist

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Title page from Mrs. Packard’s first volume.

In 1860, Elizabeth Parsons Ware Packard (see references in the Alabama Law Review and Project Muse) was committed to an Illinois insane asylum by her husband, with the assistance of a personal friend who was a physician. Packard claimed that she had been incarcerated unjustly and, after three years of work, managed to have herself released, having convinced the authorities of her sanity (the judge’s final decision in the case is said to have taken less than ten minutes to make!) Upon returning home, however, her husband sought to finish the job by isolating her in their house, boarding her up not unlike a character in Jane Eyre.

Accounts vary, but Packard herself said that her husband had institutionalized her because her religious beliefs differed from his and, as a clergyman, he was worried for his reputation and income if she continued to speak out.

During her first bout of institutionalization, Packard was eventually allowed writing materials by the asylum superintendent, Dr. Andrew McFarland. She composed at least one weighty volume while still in the asylum: The Great Drama: or, the Millenial Harbinger, which is a largely personal treatise on her own experiences and religious convictions. She divides American religous belief into two main camps: Christians and “Calvinists.” She identifies herself as the former and her husband, unambiguously referred to as her persecutor or jailor, as the latter.

Packard also wrote more specifically about the asylum system in Modern Persecution: or, insane asylums unveiled and The prisoners’ hidden life.

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!