Bill Bradford: The ‘good old days’ were terrible

bradfordTwelve-year-old Uriah Smith’s left leg became seriously infected and his doctor determined it should be amputated.

The boy was stretched out on the kitchen table of his home.

With no anaesthetic except holding his mother’s hand, the boy endured the doctor’s cutting through the flesh, sawing through the bones and closing the wound with stitches.

The year was 1844 A.D.

Uriah’s wounds healed and he lived another 59 years.

In the year 1800, the average life expectancy at birth was 32 years.

By 1850 that life expectancy had increased to 41 years.

By 1900 it had increased to 50 years.

Currently, life expectancy for women is about 80 years and slightly less for men.

The presently increased life expectancy is the result of better health habits, sanitation and health care. The “good old days” were markedly fewer in number.

On page 162 of his book Lest We Forget, George E. Knight notes, “Bathing habits, for example, also were unsatisfactory. Most people seldom took a bath, and some authorities claim that average Americans of the 1830s never took a bath during their entire life. Even as late as 1855 New York City had only 1,361 bathtubs for its 629,904 residents. And in 1882 only an estimated 2 percent of the homes in New York had water connections.”

New York City had thousands of free-running unchaperoned hogs running the streets.

There was no public disposal of garbage and most of it ended up in the streets as hog food.

Horses deposited an estimated 2.5 million pounds of manure and 60,000 gallons of urine onto the streets daily.

The streets were mostly unpaved ooze in wet weather and the source of pungent dust in dry.
For most, use of the out-house was de rigueur.

Contamination of the water supply was very common.

Robert Koch, who is credited by some as being the “father of modern microbiology,” did not graduate from university until 1866.

His isolation of several disease-causing bacteria did not occur until the late 1870s and early 1880s.

Death-dealing epidemics were not uncommon.

In 1878 an epidemic of yellow fever in Memphis, Tenn., killed 5,150 out of a population of 38,500. In 1853 New Orleans lost 7,848 to the same disease.

A trip to the hospital was essentially a death sentence. Sanitation was unknown.

A medical degree could be earned at one of America’s diploma mills in four to eight months even if the person had not been through high school.

One who earned such a degree quipped of his experience that the physician in charge “is a villain, the Hygieo-Therapeutic Clinic is a humbug and the Old Doctor Mill ought to be tipped into the Delaware” River.

Against this background of ignorance and malfeasance, John Harvey Kellogg founded in Battle Creek a medical practice and sanitarium established on more enlightened principles.

But that story will have to wait for another day.

Bill Bradford retired to the rigors of a small farm in Pokagon Township.
He has served as director of clinical laboratories in physician group practices and hospitals.

Community News

Dowagiac first responders, school staff honored for life-saving actions

Community News

2024 Dowagiac Music in The Park lineup, vendors announced

Business

YMCA to open downtown South Bend location

Buchanan

Buchanan City Commission honors retiring public safety director

Letters to the Editor

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Vote ‘yes’ for Brandywine May 7

Dowagiac

SMC, Grand Valley Omni partner to offer Bachelor’s degree options

Buchanan

Group submits signatures to force recall election of Buchanan mayor

Letters to the Editor

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Vote ‘yes’ May 7 for Brandywine Community Schools

Crime/Court

Niles man gets prison time for shooting man in neck

Berrien County

Fernwood Botanical Garden executive director announces retirement

Business

Cassopolis Beer Company to bring brews, pizza to historic building

Cass County

Cass County residents sentenced on drug charges

Community News

Niles student organizes community clean-up day

Community News

Cass County entities collaborate with EGLE to demolish unsafe building in Edwardsburg

Letters to the Editor

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive

Cass County

Undersheriff Roach announces run for Cass County Sheriff

Cass County

Cass County resident celebrates 100th birthday

Berrien County

SEMCO warns of scammers targeting utility customers

Business

Niles High School hosts annual College, Career Day

Buchanan

Buchanan Public Safety Director announces retirement

Breaking News

Cass County Sheriff Rick Behnke won’t seek re-election

Business

Local musicians to perform in downtown Dowagiac Saturday

Community News

Pokagon Volunteer Fire Department awarded grant for new equipment

Cassopolis

Cassopolis school board hosts April meeting