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Letter 0608

James Wallace to Hans Sloane – April 6, 1700


Item info

Date: April 6, 1700
Author: James Wallace
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 2-3



Original Page



Transcription

Wallace had instructed Mr. Johnson to find a book for Sloane. He asks Sloane to update him on what has been happening at Gresham College and what books have been procured by it. Wallace asks for Sloane’s account of Jamaica. James Wallace was a physician.




Patient Details

Letter 0636

Anna Hermann to Hans Sloane – September 2, 1700


Item info

Date: September 2, 1700
Author: Anna Hermann
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: f. 62



Original Page



Transcription

Hermann apologizes for her tardy reply. Many of her friends have been urging her to contact Sloane. She asks for Sloane’s support in securing her son a school place. She wants the boy to become a scholar. Anna Hermann was the wife of Leiden-based physician and botanist Paul Hermann (1646-1695) (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Hermann).




Patient Details

Letter 0615

Anna Hermann to Hans Sloane – May 11, 1700


Item info

Date: May 11, 1700
Author: Anna Hermann
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 16-17



Original Page



Transcription

Hermann writes that affairs have kept her busy for weeks. She apologizes for the lack of progress she has made with her late husband’s botany book. She thanks Sloane for his encouragement, discusses booksellers in Holland, and sends her regards to Dr Sherard. Anna Hermann was the wife of Leiden-based physician and botanist Paul Hermann (1646-1695) (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Hermann).




Patient Details

Letter 0635

James Wallace to Hans Sloane – September 1, 1700


Item info

Date: September 1, 1700
Author: James Wallace
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 60-61



Original Page



Transcription

Wallace thanks Sloane for his favours and for offering to send the Philosophical Transactions. He gives Sloane mailing instructions and asks for a way to return Sloane’s favours. James Wallace was a physician.




Patient Details

Letter 0629

W. Cheyne to Hans Sloane – August 4, 1700


Item info

Date: August 4, 1700
Author: W. Cheyne
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: f. 42



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Transcription




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: Mrs. Cheyne
    Gender:
    Age:
  • Description
  • Diagnosis

    Dropsy (back and legs).

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:
    Ongoing Treatment:
    Response:

    Soon it will be Mrs. Cheyne's fourteenth day on Sloane's prescription of (unspecified) pills. After she took the tenth pill, she purged black stools, but the next time when she took pills (six at a time), they did not work. As well, she used to be cold, but now is hot. Her stomach and sleep remain troubled and the swelling remains.

  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Pain, Hydropsy, Back

Letter 0612

Patrick Gordon to Hans Sloane – May 2, 1700


Item info

Date: May 2, 1700
Author: Patrick Gordon
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 11-12



Original Page



Transcription

Gordon’s ship is bound for the Baltic. He asks Sloane to tell John Hoskyns that he made inquiries in Southampton as requested, but found nothing of interest. Gordon sends his regards to the Greshamites and offers his services to the Royal Society. Patrick Gordon (d. 1702) was a Naval Chaplain on the HMS Salisbury. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1694 (https://collections.royalsociety.org/DServe.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Persons&dsqPos=5&dsqSearch=%28Surname%3D%27gordon%27%29).




Patient Details

Letter 0778

Richard Richardson to Hans Sloane – April 26, 1703


Item info

Date: April 26, 1703
Author: Richard Richardson
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4039
Folio: ff. 121-122



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Transcription

[fol. 121] Worthy Sr I had long agoe made answer to your kind letter if any thing has offers is lefte with your notice but my fearibes of late after Nat: Hist: have been very inconcidorable however out of that small collection of fossils I am now master of, I have sent you a litle box, among the rest you wil meet with a stone not very unlikly representing the dried boughs of some tree in Bas relat, which I take to be nue, this cannot be referred to Mr Lhwyts Asterapodia not being articulated, an other stone comes along with it which I beleive may be thither referred, but much larger & different from any he has figured, these are ablended with some other Fossils [?] Lithophyts, some of which you wil meet with amongst the Designes; with this comes my request to you for your assistance & directions in the case of a worthy gentlewoman, who has committed her selfe to my care & whose health I heartily wish for she is about 4g years of age, pretty Corpulent & of a sanguine constitution who formerly (dark)imd a good state of health but since the suppression of her menstuouse courses (which was (dark) two years agoe) she has found her selfe sometimes out of order with a difficulty in breathing but that trouble was not soe sensible to her as of late being now full Bodyed though I thinke not soe much as some weeks agoe & complains as if she was yirt aout under her stomach, this is attended with a very great difficulty in breathing, which is very troublesome to her especially in walking, she can endure the motion of a coach prety wel, which does very like disorder her, her stomach is prety good seldome complaining of any thing after eating, but upon an empty sto: :mach finds & uneasynesse & hollownesse which is the best remedyd by eating a litle, she sometimes complains of a faintnesse & lownesse of her spirits. Her urine is equall in quantity to the liquids she takes & often disposes a thick redy sedment, she generally breaths more freely towards night, her complexion is very cleare & has noe weight nor uneasynesse in the lower part of her body, her legs swels no more then theu have sometimes done in her health, which is very litle. She has formerly been incident to a flux of cold & hume some times on one side & sometimes the other of her heade upon any disorder, which now sometimes troubles her but generally goes of it by applying warme cloths to it. She sleeps prety wel, but often awakes in a faint sweat [(inter-line) her pulse is for the most part prety strong & regulare] this is the good Ladys case, as neare as I can describe it to you, which to mee seems purly Histericall; your Fee you wil finde in the box of Fossils, which John Houedesworth wil bring to your hands [?] a Broade not thinking it safe to inclose it in this letter [fol. 122] I desire you would favoure me with your thoughts upon this case & your directions by the first pat, if you can conveniently & if any alterations happen, you shall have a farther account as assure of the effects of your directions purging medicins had been prescribed her before I was consulted, Calibiate Tinctures Histerick medicins in several forms bitter wines & during drinkes with V cale: uu by the use of steel medicins the always grew worse which put her into a very uneal heats & quite hote away her stomach & though she continued the use of them for a conciderable time they would not all agree with her. I orderd her Antideerlutick & Diu: :relick medium in severall formes which have agreed with her very wel & though I doe perceive she is much better then of late yel I heartily with a more speedy methode might be found out for her recovery prey let me alsoe have your opinion about the use of the Bath water or german spaw water in this case, your speedy answer to this case wil very much oblige Your obed: servant Ric: Richardson North Bierley Ap: 26 703

Richardson sends a small box of fossils that he has worked with. He includes a description of them.

Richardson was a physician and botanist who traveled widely in England, Wales, and Scotland in search of rare specimens. He corresponded and exchanged plants with many well-known botanists and naturalists (W. P. Courtney, Richardson, Richard (16631741), rev. Peter Davis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2010 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/23576, accessed 31 May 2011]).




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A Unnamed (Woman)
    Gender:
    Age:49 years old.
  • Description

    'Pretty corpulent'; sanguine constitution. Formerly prone to fluxes of colds; legs previously swelled often, but no longer.

  • Diagnosis

    Trouble breathing, especially when walking (but she can ride in a coach). On an empty stomach, suffers uneasiness, hollowness, faintness, and low spirits. Her urine 'is equal in quantity to the liquids of the lakes', with red sediment. Awakes in faint sweats. Richardson's diagnosis: 'The good ladys case, as neare as I can describe it to you... to mee seems purely hystericall'.

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    Has been given 'hysterick medicines', bitter wines, and drying drinks.


    Ongoing Treatment:
    Response:

    The medicines, wines, and drinks have always made her worse and put her into a great heat. See also: Sloane MS 4039 f. 125.

  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Urinary, Emotions, Hysteria, Lungs, Menopause

Letter 2459

Richard Richardson to Hans Sloane – March 3, 1720/21


Item info

Date: March 3, 1720/21
Author: Richard Richardson
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: ff. 70-71



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 70] Hon:d Sir Your extensive knowledge in Naturell History induces be to beleive that the least part of it has not escaped your Curiouse inquiry which putts one upon taking the freedome to kind you a small Collection of mosses & wish you as much pleasure in perusing thm as I had in collecting them; there are not many of the Common ones unles such as are rarely met with instead. The sevear Frosts for six weeks by past have intirely spoyld all prospect of Spring Moss Croping so that looking the small number over which I collected last spring I have sent you the best Collection I can at present make out, which I desire when you have a leasure sooner to last […]merable lye upon till I can send you a letter, which I hope to do if I live to see an other season. My old friend the Consul when he favoured me with his company at his place was the first who put me upon this inquiry which was [?] much better there I [?] considering they have been mostly discoverd in the [?] of three miles from this place a few from Craven & Lancashire excepted & I doubt not but as great a member has been past [?] om the same compass. I know your stone is very valluable to you, & at present being confined to my [?] by a gentle fitt of the [?] have more leasure time upon my hands then usuall to serve my friends in some past particulars, therefore have fixed the mosses upon papers I sent you & added to as many of them as I think Mr Ray has observed his names at length & some few of Mr Bobarts & the rest which I think are not mentiond by any one I have added names of my own I find Signieur Micheli of Florence proposes to print his 50 nova plantaru genera in 30 copper plates wherein he assures us we shall have of Lichenes museo Fungi & musei to the number of 350 which if he performe without multiplying species (as most have don already who have wrote upon this subject) he wil discover more by sea then all have don before him Italy no doubt affords a vast number of Fungi which are strangers to us & are more peculiare to hot Countrys mosses seem to delight in places more remout from the Sun the small inquirys I have made nigh home without the least assistance almost assures me that if our country of [?] was diligently searched it would alone afford more mosses then all Italy. High mountains shady woods & deep Cloughs which the Sun scarce affects in sumer are the most promising places for discoverys of this kind. I have added to them a specimen or two of Alsine latifolia montana flore laciniato CBP which I have found nigh this place in abundance, which Mr. Ray has not noted to be of the growth of our Island & assure a specimen or two of a very beautyfull Capillary which I lately found on some shady moyst rocks not far of in my searches for mosses which I take to be [?]. the mosses are sent by John Hall a Bradford Carier who Inns at the White Horse nigh Cripplegate & wil be in London on Wednesday night. they are packt up betwixt two Boards & directed for you. [fol. 70v] I am very much obliged to you for your last kind letter I had returnd my thanks for it sooner but was very desirouse to add my mite to your most compleat [?] nothing in this world could have been a more agreeable entertainment to me then a through viewe of it, which I hope still one time or other to be so happy as to see. I wish at your leasure you would let me know what Birds Eggs you want which are to be met with in the North & I wil endeavoure to serve you. I have formerly sent some to Mr Dandridge John Scheuchzers Books are come to me in the time of my confinement, (viz) Specimen Agrestographia his Agrestographie [?] & his Agrestographia, I generally have an account from some of my friends when any Books in Nat: Hist: come out of moment & I generally procure the[m], there are some of the old ons that I have not hither to been able to meet with some of German works (viz of his small treatesses) Wagner’s Historia Naturalis Helvetia Schwenekfeltis Cat. Thorpin et fossilin Helvetia Fabÿ Columna phytobasanos, Tregi Historia Cameraro[…] Epitomen [?] with some few more. Looking over part of the Consuls Collection of plants when I was last at London I tould him that I hoped shortly to see his pinax appear abroad he tould me he still labourd at it & had advanced prety far towards it but that without the assistance of one of his Freinds he should scarce be able to compleat it & that it was assured no foreigner could ever pretend to do it. I imediatly askt him who it was, he told me without the perusall of Dr pluquenets & petivers Collections of plants which were mow in your hands he could not be able to go through with it, & that since these Collections were reduced into no method & most of them without names, he could not reduce them to Classes nor adjust theire Synoymas unles he had the Collection by him. I know we have no person in England capable of such an undertaking except your selfe & the Consul. & since your time is much more advantagiously employd for the good of mankind I flatter my selfe that you who we all own to be the great patron of that Learning wil be ready to promoat a Worke of so much use to Botany & so much to the glory of our English Nation; if you think it reasonable to have them out of your Custody, you may be assured they wil be in such hands that you may have them returned upon the least notice; this freedome I take to acquaint you with what past & to name it to you though unknown to him & heartily wish that he may have no pretence to decline the Worke he has labourd at for so many years by part. by this time I may reasonably beleive I have wearied out a good share of your patience & that for the future you wil not desire such tediouse [?]. but be assured that it is the result of my due respect to you upon account of the freedome which you have always alowed your much obliged & obed: servant Ric: Richardson North Bierley mar. 3d 1720

Richardson was a physician and botanist who traveled widely in England, Wales, and Scotland in search of rare specimens. He corresponded and exchanged plants with many well-known botanists and naturalists (W. P. Courtney, Richardson, Richard (16631741), rev. Peter Davis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2010 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/23576, accessed 31 May 2011]).




Patient Details

Suffering Venereal Disease in the Early Eighteenth Century

Lindsey Fitzharris (@ChirurgeonsAppr) recently discussed deformities caused by syphilis and the problems of prevention using early condoms (“Syphilis: A Love Story”). She also regularly tweets horrifying pictures of syphilis sufferers in the past, or the raddled syphilitic bones that remain. Evocative stuff.

One of the less revolting images. Head illustrating syptoms of syphilis, 1632. Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

But the day-to-day life of someone suffering from venereal disease wasn’t always so dramatic. Some Sloane letters hint at the physical and emotional experiences of those suffering from long-term venereal complaints.

In the early eighteenth century, many venereal symptoms were not immediately obvious to people. The skin rashes, pustules and chancres of late stage gonorrhoea might easily be confused with syphilis, which in turn could be mistaken for scurvy. Treatments for syphilis and scurvy might even be the same: the underlying problem seen as being hot and corrosive or a matter of poisoned blood. As William Salmon explained in a popular remedy book (1703), his family pills would cure, along with other diseases, “the Scurvy (the only reigning disease in this Kingdom) when it is grown so bad, as to become scandalous, so as many People think it to be the POX”.[1] To further confuse matters, any whitish discharge from the genitals—known as ‘whites’ in women, ‘gleets’ in men or ‘running of the reins’ in all— was potentially classed as a gonorrhoea. Gonorrhoea, they believed, might be caused by masturbation or accidents to the lower back, not just sexual intercourse.

The problem of diagnosis can be seen in the letters of Thomas Hewitt, Roger Cook and J. Hopson. In 1721, Hewitt treated an unnamed gentleman aged 60, described as being scorbutic (e.g. ulcerated skin, lethargy and pallor). The patient’s main troubles, though, were a continual need to defecate and rectal pain. He had several rectal growths, which were voiding a frothy substance. Hewitt was obviously of two minds about the cause of the ailments. Although he had administered mercurial purges (treatment for syphilis), he also insisted that the patient was “an honest trustworthy gentleman”. Sloane, incidentally, also prescribed a typical syphilis treatment: salivation. Cook, in his undated letter, reported suffering from weakness caused by a constant gleet and nocturnal pollutions. Although he didn’t specify gonorrhoea, this would have been a suspicion. Hopson, for example, immediately suspected gonorrhoea when he had “running of the reins” for a couple days.

The physical experience of venereal problems and their treatments was inevitably painful, though they varied widely. Henry Downing reported that he’d had a three-month salivation to treat venereal disease when he was in his twenties. By 1726, he was ricketty, frail, and sedentary. His physical symptoms included pain throughout his body; heart palpitations; heat and pain in his anus, scrotum and urethra; difficulty urinating; and scaly rough skin. A pretty miserable existence.

Hewitt’s patient took opiates to deal with his pain, or indeed perhaps some of his other treatments. In order to drain the pus, Hewitt had dilated his patient’s anal supporation with a sponge. Mercurial treatments also generally required extensive bed rest, owing the various leakages, skin eruptions, and tooth loosening. Not so different from the symptoms of syphilis it was meant to be treating!

The case of Mr Campbell, aged 63, also suggests the long-term health problems that people thought might occur. Thomas Molyneaux and other medical practitioners wrote to Sloane on Campbell’s behalf in 1724. While not obviously venereal symptoms, Molyneaux saw Campbell’s experience of clap in 1685 as significant. Campbell had trouble urinating afterwards. By 1724, Campbell had a blockage in the bladder, pain while sitting, and a hot and burning sensation in the urethra. He was also voiding slime instead of urine.

Worse yet, failure to disclose one’s venereal condition could be fatal. In August 1725, J. Hetherington wrote to Sloane about the death of a young man after being inoculated for smallpox. The underlying concern was that the inoculation, a novel treatment championed by Sloane, might have caused the death. Hethrington was adamant that the patient, who had not been in the “correct habit”, was the one to blame. The young man had failed to tell the inoculation surgeon about his venereal disease and recent treatment. (A physician applied a plaster to his swollen scrotum.) The treatment had successfully reduced the inflammation, but a fever started the next day. This, Hetherington was certain, caused the complications with the inoculation.

Given that these men were blamed for their poor bodily condition, stemming from lack of self-control, no wonder shame and fear were constant companions for the venereal sufferer. There are relatively few letters to Sloane discussing sexual problems of any kind, and some—such as that by E.W.—were anonymous.[2] Embarrassment might also suggest why Hetherington’s patient did not tell the surgeon. Once his problem was apparently gone, there was no need to tell anyone else, including the surgeon, about it. A sufferers’ physical condition also needs to be considered alongside his emotional one. Patients listed fear (Downing and Hopson), weariness (Downing), and melancholy (Hewitt’s patient) among their symptoms. Pain in early modern England was seen as simultaneously physical and emotional.

As their bodies leaked in unseemly ways and their skin turned ulcerated or rough, the sufferers who wrote to Sloane must have been terrified at what fate might yet await them: the fallen noses, blindness or ulcerated skin of syphilis or the swollen testicles and impotence of gonorrhoea.  And above all, they had only themselves to blame.



[1] William Salmon, Collectanea Medica, the Country Physician (London, 1703), p. 452.

[2] Women in particular are absent. This may partly be because of the many ways in which the ‘whites’ might be interepreted medically, if symptoms were present at all. Hopson had asked “the woman”, but she claimed to have no symptoms. As we know today, many women never have any symptoms. Women and their physicians might, deliberately or not, be able to avoid a more shameful venereal diagnosis that called the woman’s behaviour, or that of their husbands, into question.

On shame, see for example K. Siena, Venereal Disease, Hospitals and the Urban Poor: London’s Foul Wards, 1600-1800 (Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 2004).

On the moral implications of leaky bodies, see L.W. Smith, “The Body Embarrassed? Rethinking the Leaky Male Body in Eighteenth-Century England and France“, Gender and History 23, 1 (2011): 26-46.

Two great blog posts on v.d. (by Jennifer Evans) appeared just after I’d published this one!  One is on “The Secret Disease” and the other is on “Beauty and the Pox“.

Servington Savery

Servington Savery (c.1670-c.1744) was a natural philosopher. He authored a paper on magnetism that was published in the Philosophical Transactions in 1730. Savery also designed a telescope, which George Graham used to measure the sun’s diameter. He spent his career in Shilston, near Modbury, Devon.

Reference:

Patricia Fara, ‘Savery, Servington (c.1670–c.1744)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004 http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/53780 [accessed 18 Aug 2014]).



Dates: to

Occupation: Unknown

Relationship to Sloane: Virtual International Authority File: