May
19, 2021
Through
my kitchen window I see green as spring settles into warmer, lighter
days. Gone are the white dogwood blossoms and the pink and red azalea
blossoms. The pink peach blossoms have given way to serious attempts
at growing fruit. The fig trees watched the peach trees, “Show
offs!” they grumble and quietly get down to growing figs between
their green leaves.
May
is the month of Mary, the mother who did not show off, she did what
she needed to do, always. The month of mothers when mothers are
celebrated; and the month of Memorial Day, when mothers mourn
military children fallen in uniform. It is also the month Lothar was
born in Germany and died in Germany, which made few ripples outside
my family and our son and daughter; I do not know whether his 57
patents are still useful for semi-conductors in the car industry.
---
May
12 1820
A
baby was born in Italy on this day in 1820, in Firenze, the City of
Flowers. This baby lived 90 years and made more than ripples, she
made tsunamis. She was named Florence Shore, named after the
Anglicized name for Firenze. When she was an adult, in exchange for a
fortune her father changed his last name to Nightingale, and hers
with it. She became Miss Florence Nightingale: the Western European
Protestant Mrs Mary Seacole.
---
Mrs
Mary Seacole
Mrs
Mary Seacole was born Miss Mary Jane Grant to a British military
officer from Scotland, and a British healer and hotelier from
Jamaica, in Jamaica in 1805, during a time the British and French
were fighting over colonial expansion and British officers were all
over the Caribbean, having been decisively kicked out of the United
States of America. Miss Grant became Mrs Seacole in Jamaica in 1836
when she married Edwin Horatio Hamilton Seacole, another British army
officer who is reported to have some sort of connection to Admiral
Horatio Nelson. Mr Seacole was ill when they married, “delicate
constitution” is the phrase; his wife applied all her knowledge,
and managed to keep him alive longer than expected. Mrs Seacole was
widowed in 1844.
Mrs
Seacole started her healthcare career healing her dolls, progressed
onto cats and dogs, and was soon rapidly soaking up all the knowledge
of running a hotel and healing the sick and injured from her mother.
She learned early the need human life has for clean air, clean
clothes, clean food, clean water. Which in my observation in staying
in homes in east, west and southern Africa, and of homes of African
descendants in the United States of America and the Caribbean, is
very African, very ancient. And not European. How often have I heard
the absurd story that Dr Semmelweis introduced into healthcare the
practice of washing your hands in 1847, because European male
healthcare workers believed that having dirty hands was good for
patient morale.
In
Nigeria I loved hearing about traditional clay pots holding up to 20
gallons of river water. Holding it, the sediment settling, and after
some months, the water is clear and sweet. Plastic bottles are yet
another curse the greedy west has inflicted on the world, a solution
for which the problem was invented, and the problem became real. How
did Mrs Seacole ensure water was clean? I want to find out, I know
she knew how.
Mrs
Seacole was already a successful healer, a “doctress” when Mr
Seacole died, but after that her skills became known in other
Caribbean islands as she traveled and made herself useful, leaving
healed patients behind her. She was an administrator, as much as she
was allowed to administer. Bureaucrats everywhere stopped her
professionalism and efforts, just as Nazi Germany removed health
qualifications and German citizenship from Sir Hans Krebs, on whose
path I followed in my laboratory investigations of carbon dioxide
metabolism in the human body.
---
Sir
Hans Krebs
Sir
Hans Krebs won a Nobel Prize in Medicine and Physiology in 1953; I
know he was for some years working in Sheffield, exactly when my
mother was a young physician working in Sheffield hospitals. I wrote
a short story about that time, when German planes were dropping bombs
on Sheffield, and my mother was not believed when she told her boss
she had acute appendicitis.
When she fainted after her appendix
burst, the same boss sent her parents in Belfast a telegram, saying
they should come immediately, she would not survive the night. I
cannot believe that any of my mother’s idiot bosses or colleagues
operated on her; I am quite sure Sir Hans Krebs, trained thoroughly
in Germany, saved her life. A lovely fiction I enjoyed writing. When
I was an undergraduate studying liver metabolism I asked my mother if
she ever met him. She claimed not.
Someone
competent cut Dr Patience Uprichard open and saved her life, I want
to give Sir Hans the credit. Or perhaps a young female health
professional snuck in and successfully cleaned out my mother’s
insides because the senior surgeon was drunk. Someone competent saved my mother's life when experts believed that was not possible.
My
mother had stories about completing operations herself when the
senior surgeon was incapacitated. The younger male physicians were
mostly traveling with the British military, as soon as my father
completed his medical training in 1944 he was given military training
and sent off the Asia as the medical officer of an African regiment in February 1945. Most of the battles had already been fought, I believe he was never under fire, I know he thoroughly enjoyed his Asian war. He never again was in such a position of respect as he was as a recent mredical graduate of 25.
The only physicians left in Britain from 1939 to 1945 were the old, the incompetent,
and those waiting for military orders. My mother’s orders never
came, she eventually moved to London to work at the now defunct
Paddington Hospital where she cared for children injured and
traumatized by bombing, and ill from diseases that come from dust,
infection, bad food, and despair. Dr Patience's resilience stayed with her, always.
---
Miss
Florence Nightingale
So
now that I have deep-dived into healthcare incompetence, I need to
describe healthcare competence emerging from the disaster of King
Henry 8th grabbing the lands and resources of the
monasteries and convents in England from 1536. Until then, one-third
of the lands in England belonged to the church, much for the simple
reason that rich people died and bequeathed property to the Roman
Catholic Church. The destruction of the monasteries destroyed
education, and healthcare. The tradition of religious sisters caring
for the sick was gone; and in its place laws against women being
healers, which resulted in women delivering medicinal plants to dying
patients being murdered as witches.
In
Europe Roman Catholic monasteries and convents continued doing what
they had been doing, including caring for the sick, and so when the
young Miss Nightingale wanted to learn more about nursing, she
traveled to France and Germany, and before long had responsibility
for institutions in England. Miss Nightingale was most interested in
the structure and administration of nursing in Roman Catholic
institutions; for a time she had a priest advisor with her goal of
converting to Roman Catholicism. After some months he advised against
it. He understood that she rebelled against oppression of women, and
of anyone, and was not willing to ever become anyone’s wife or
plaything.
Nothing
Miss Nightingale would have had any importance, we would not have
heard her name, if not for the most important skill both she and Mrs
Seacole shared: networking. I am always remembering the words of Mr
Roy A Hastick the older, founder and CEO of the CACCI (Caribbean
American Chamber of Commerce and Industry): “Networking works!”
Mr Hastick died on Holy Wednesday in 2020 from covid19, after 35
years of bringing people together in CACCI.
Miss
Nightingale was the grand-daughter of William Edward Smith MP, the
main agitator for the acceptance of non-Anglicans in public life and
universities; but even more important, he was the main agitator for
the abolition of human trafficking between Africa, Europe and the
Americas. She was the daughter of the filthy rich Mr Shore, whose
wealth was further increased when he became Mr Nightingale.
In
a visit to a relative in Hampshire in 2005 I was driven around Miss
Nightingale's family house, which is now a rather large girls’
school surrounded by acres of land. Mr Nightingale was generous with
his wealth, giving Miss Nightingale and her sister a fabulous
education across Europe and entry into the finest socially aware and
politically conversant drawing rooms. Where she met Sir Sidney
Herbert, who was the Secretary at War during the Crimean War, and who
knew well Miss Nightingale’s nursing ventures.
How
did Miss Nightingale learn anatomy and physiology, a chaperoned young
woman with no brothers, no lovers, no husbands? Um. Have you ever
looked at Roman and Greek statues? Read anything written by Greek and
Roman philosophers and poets? Education while filthy rich, indeed.
She did not learn diagnosis or therapies; which Mrs Seacole did. Mrs
Seacole had the skills of an enthusiastic trench-working physician,
Mrs Nightingale had the skills of a senior executive and educator.
In
1854 Sir Sidney Herbert asked Miss Nightingale to collect nurses to
travel to Crimea for a war that had the goal of stopping Russian
expansion. Mrs Seacole heard of it, and traveled to London, one of
many trips she had made until then. She was told that the nursing
contingent had already left, and she would not have been wanted even
if it had not. This was because bureaucracy demanded appearance was
more important than competence, and Mrs Seacole had a grandmother who
was African. From whom her healing arts were passed down.
Mrs
Seacole, I like her more every day, was not one to take “no” for
an answer. She arranged her own transport to Crimea and was soon
doing good, bringing wounded and ill soldiers back to life with her
treatments, her care, her provisions.
Mrs Seacole did such a good job that
when she returned to England in 1856 she was bankrupt. This was
reported in The Times of London on November 7th, 1856. I
get angry when I read it, which is my most usual reaction to anything
written about Mrs Seacole. Mr Day was her husband’s nephew:
“The
bankrupts, Mrs. Mary Seacole and Thomas Day, the younger, are
described as of Tavistock-street, Covent- garden, and
Ratcliff-terrace, provision merchants, and formerly of Balaklava and
Spring-hill, front of Sebastopol. Mrs. Seacole is a lady of colour,
and has been honoured with four Government medals for her kindness to
the British soldiery. She was present in person and attracted much
attention, the gaily coloured decorations on her breast being in
perfect harmony with the rest of her attire.
"After
several proofs had been admitted, and Mr. Day had stated that be had
sustained great loss by horses at Balaclava-horses for which 20
pounds had been paid being given away on the army leaving the Crimea,
an allowance of three guineas per week was suggested for Mrs.
Seacole, and two guineas per week for the other bankrupt.
"A
creditor however, dissented to the proposal of three guineas. He
thought two guineas per week sufficient for each bankrupt. Mrs.
Seacole.-I have got my washing to pay. (Great laughter.) His Honour
thought two guineas sufficient. Order accordingly.”
Most
fortunate for anyone wanting to know more about Mrs Seacole is that
she wrote a memoir, which has been published as “Wonderful
Adventures of Mrs Seacole in Many Lands.” I bought my copy on my
first visit to the Florence Nightingale Museum in London in 2005.
I
had been in London in 2004, a stop-over on my way to a European
Medical Writers Association conference in Budapest. I was in London
for one purpose, to walk around St Thomas’s Hospital and see how
far it was from St Paul’s Cathedral. A long way, I discovered, but
a short distance, across the Thames River (by the way, it is
pronounced Temms) from the Houses of Parliament. I had written a
short story about St Thomas’s Hospital being bombed when my father
was a medical student and wanted to verify geography.
I walked around
St Thomas’s, and came across a sign for the Florence Nightingale
Museum. Until then I had no idea they were connected. I returned to
Philadelphia, read everything about Florence Nightingale, and became
a huge fan. I wrote an essay about her for the European Medical
Writers Association journal, which is online at
http://www.mjota.org/images/FlorenceNightingale.pdf
I
had learned as a small child that Florence Nightingale shone light,
the Lady with the Lamp; and now know that her genius was in
understanding that healthcare includes financing, architecture,
agriculture, climate as well as diagnosis and treatments. I can see
her nodding approvingly at the measures taken by administrators who
understand how everything fits together during the covid19 pandemic
crisis. I am hoping we all read and reread "Notes on Nursing",
which first appeared in 1859, and her other books and letters.
Also
we can learn from Mrs Seacole. She learned healing and hygiene from
her ancestors, and combined that with learning from her observations
of therapies that were successful. Always interesting to me the
importance of Scots in healthcare; I know the first medical schools
in the United States of America and in the Commonwealth of Australia
were established by Scots. I remember the hospital my family lived in
during our three years in New Zealand was mostly staffed by Scottish
Presbyterian healthcare professionals. I even went to Presbyterian
Sunday School. Not sure why healthcare and Presbyterians are so
strongly linked.
What
is Mrs Seacole’s legacy? It is harder to understand than Miss
Nightingale’s because Mrs Seacole never had the institutional and
political support that Miss Nightingale had. Miss Nightingale was
able to establish help build the new St Thomas’s Hospital across
from the Houses of Parliament after the British public raised a huge
amount of money for her to do so. Included in the hospital was with a
nurses’ training school. Mrs Seacole’s legacy is the
understanding that traditional African healing works, that healthcare
professionals can be women, and the function of a healthcare worker,
a healer, is to go to where they are needed. Mrs Seacole put into
practice the theory that Miss Nightingale wrote about and taught
decades later: clean air, clean food, clean clothes, clean water are
essential to surviving illness or injury, any other medicines can
only help if the foundation is there. I do not know which plants and
practices Mrs Seacole knew and used. I would like to find out.
Mrs
Seacole writes about meeting Miss Nightingale, very positively.
Clearly they each recognized the decency and competency of the other.
A statue of Mrs Seacole has been erected to her outside the Florence
Nightingale Museum. I like that. It recognizes not only Mrs Seacole
but the many Caribbean healthcare professionals who came to work in
Britain with their children and stayed, and became part of its
professional, cultural and political life.
Both
books I have mentioned are by now in the public domain, and can be
read on GutenbergPress.com. If you want more, I suggest buying copies
from the Florence Nightingale Museum. They include forewords and
other additions,
https://www.florence-nightingale.co.uk/product-category/books/
------
May
12 1890
On
this day in 1890 a first child was born in Dharmsala, in India, to
Caroline and Charles. They were both British citizens, and in the
1890s the sun never set on the British Empire, a shortage of servants
was starting to increase their wages, labor movements were starting
to improve the lives of workers and raise their standard of living,
and nursing was starting to be understood as a career apart from a
volunteer activity for rich women. The idea that every person was
entitled to a decent living was taking hold, and leading to
independence of colonies that were realized mostly in the 1960s.
These
were probably not in Caroline and Charles’ thoughts. Charles was
the restless son of the daughter of the owner of the Priory, the
remains of a monastery on the Isle of Wight that King Henry 8th
had stolen, and given to Eton, which in turn had sold it to an
ancestor. Charles’ father was a London stockbroker, brother of an
engineer who built bridges and railways across South America.
Caroline was the daughter of a beer baron who had followed his uncle
to Australia after his uncle had been given 2,560 acres of prime land
in Sydney in 1828. Land that is now underneath Sydney’s Central
Railway and the University of Sydney.
I was told that genius
administration was why this family became wealthy in Australia,
selling beer to Australians cannot have been difficult; I now believe
a lot of wealth came from selling parcels of land they were given
with the only requirement that they build a factory making beer.
Now,
131 years later, Britain itself looks likely to break up; is this
punishment for theft and cruelty all across the world, or the natural
evolution of a tiny set of islands that punched above its weight for
several centuries?
Charles
had been a student at Oxford. He left before graduation to travel to
India, returned to England, returned to Oxford, graduated, became a
British Army officer, hated it, trained as a barrister at the Inner
Temple, hated that, married Caroline, and returned to India as a tea
planter where they produced their two children. Their younger child
became my English grandfather.
When Charles and Caroline returned
from India to claim their inheritances from their deceased fathers
they moved into a stately house in Hampshire and joined the local
Anglican church. I know this because the current occupant of the
house has told me about Caroline’s gifts to the church. Perhaps
domesticity was too much for Charles; he died by his own hand in
1898, absolutely not equipping his sons for the 20th
Century and its strife.
Their
first-born child also led a restless life. He had a gift for
languages, no question, as did his Uncle Campbell and Uncle Edward, a gift I did not inherit. He left Oxford University after one year, and
then was caught in the maelstrom that was World War I.
My mother had
a lovely story about Uncle Rex being awarded prestigious scholarships
and helping start the League of Nations; which is a lot easier to
like than the truth: Uncle Rex worked as a translator of French and
German in World War I, he never recovered from the physical or mental
affects of being gassed in the trenches in France, and was kicked out
of the British Army for not being able to do the minimum required of
an under-fire lieutenant.
Uncle Rex tried his best, teaching at schools,
volunteering in World War II, eventually drifting to Vienna where he
died alone in 1962, notice of his death was sent to my father from the British Embassy in Austria. I know so little about him, I do not even know what he looked like.
We want so much for
horror to produce good; dark to produce light. It does not. We have
to follow the light that flickers, that we can just see, and help
others towards it the best we can.
---
Organizing
Books
I
have started on a new, huge project. Cataloging every one of my
books. I believe I have about 2,000 volumes, quite a few have been
rescued from Quaker and medical libraries. The main problem is dust,
I have been wiping the volumes down, recording them, giving them
numbers. Soon, I hope soon, I hope to post every title online, with
the goal of finding better homes for them.
I
suggest that anyone wanting to donate books to our tiny collection in
Arch St Meeting House, or in any collection, first supply a list of
books. I found during my months volunteering in the book collection
at Friends Center, which is known as the Henry Cadbury Library and
housed in the noisiest part of the building (they hold choir
practices there), that people like to clean out their houses and dump
books on the volunteers, which rapidly swamps volunteers and spaces.
Far better for receivers of books to be given lists they can go
through, rather than boxes of dusty and moldy books that no-one
reads, or wants to.
I
had been looking through my collection for my books about Sir Hans
Krebs, and his mentor Otto Warburg. I found them safe and readable.
What is not to like about a German scientist with ancestors who
followed the Jewish religion, and whose life partner was a Prussian
cavalry officer who grew wheat to make into the bread that he served
on their table? All throughout the Third Reich, and in Berlin? Otto
Warburg was also a Nobel laureate; he was able to continue his
investigations into the causes of cancer right up until Russian
soldiers smashed up the laboratory.
War
is hell, all parts of war.
---
Local
Elections
John
Choe for New York City Council.
https://linktr.ee/johnchoeforus
https://twitter.com/johnchoe4nyc
http://www.peacescientists.org/johnxchoe.html
Larry
Krasner for Philadelphia District Attorney
https://www.pbs.org/independentlens/blog/philadelphia-has-a-long-history-of-fights-over-criminal-justice-reform/
----
Aces
Day of Honor
War is hell, and the Aces
Museum is a sanctuary to broken veterans who are loved and whose
divine light is recognized by the owner and founder, Dr Althea V
Hankins, who is a board-certified and practicing internist. They
are at 5801 Germantown Avenue, easy to get to from Center City
Philadelphia: Bus 23; Chestnut Hill East line to Germantown, which is
why it was a USO for Buffalo soldiers in the global conflict that
ended in 1945.
https://www.acesmuseum.online/.
----
Wednesday
Meeting for Worship
Every
Wednesday aka Fourth Day at 6-6:30pm. Monthly Meeting of Friends of
Philadelphia Meeting for Worship. Zoom space open earlier for
greetings and chats, afterwards for fellowship. We cover a lot of
ground, some amazing discussions, all are welcome. Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87526260118
----
May
your life and your work continue in peace,
Susanna
J Dodgson
http://peacescientists.org
1-609-792-1571
PO
Box 381, Haddonfield, NJ 08033
YouTube: Dr SJ Dodgson
Twitter:
Dr SJ Dodgson @SusannaDodgson