2024-07-13 00:59:49
If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.
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Hi there, friends. It's me, Josh. And for this week's select, I've chosen our April 2020 episode on Elizabeth Blackwell, who is a complex person to say the least. And she's a great example of how nobody fits neatly into one group or another. And she's a great lesson in how a person who you might hold different views from and values from can still be one of your heroes.
I hope you get a lot out of this episode about Elizabeth Blackwell, the feminist icon.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Charles, Chuck Wayne, Twain Bryant. And there's Jerry Jerome Rowland, the Rizzy.
And I'm just Josh. Like just Jack was just Jack. Wow. Okay. That's a heck of an intro.
Thank you. Let's do a little jazz.
hands there. Just call me Twain. Twain. from now on. Twain.
It's not awkward to pronounce.
It's really close to schwing. Remember that? Schwing. Oh, man. I totally forgot about it until just now.
Schwing, Chuck. Schwing. Schwing. That's how you have to say it. No, you can.
say it anyway. Like schwing. Yeah. Well, what I really love is that we're talking about.
America's first woman physician, an amazing woman named Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, who had an amazing family. And her story is incredible. And we're saying schwing. Schwing.
At the.
beginning. Right. Especially considering that she was a rather puritanical person. in a lot of senses. She would probably not have been down with us saying schwing.
No. No, because.
you know what?
She and her family were Quakers. And I know some Quakers and have known some Quakers. They hate schwing. They do. But you know what they love?
What? Being awesome.
Yeah. Yeah. No, I mean, for sure. I get the impression that her entire family is a pretty good example of like a Quaker family. Quaker.
Every Quaker I've known has just had it like.
had it all figured out. It seems like they're like the Buddhists of the West. Yeah. Yeah.
Pretty much. They also. I think they also go by the Society of Friends, which says a lot, too.
If. Yeah, I'm pretty sure. And then, if you remember correctly, Charles, our pacifist episode focused heavily on the Quakers, because they're big time pacifists, too. So Elizabeth Blackwell, just by virtue of having been a Quaker, was a pretty interesting, like upstanding, upright person with with a good head on her shoulders. But she also, like individually, personally, was a very amazing person.
And not just the fact that she was the first licensed woman physician in America. Yeah. But to get there, she really had to blaze her own path and put up with a lot of B.S., you might put it.
And so much so that even in her her autobiography, which was published in 1895, when she was in her 70s, I think, she called it pioneering work. And that was there's really no better way to put it. She was absolutely a pioneer in not just getting herself established as a woman physician in America, but in making it so that there could be more women physician in America, physicians. And more.
And more. Much more. So let's start with, oh, I don't know, February 3rd, 1821.. What's significant about that date? She was born as a little baby near Bristol, England.
She was the third of nine children. Her mom was Hannah Lane, who came from a family of merchants who had some dough. And her pops was Samuel Blackwell. He was a sugar refiner and also prosperous. And, like we said, they were Quakers, which means that they were very cool.
They were not. And this was 1821.. They were not down with slavery. They were activists against slavery. Yeah.
They were abolitionists. They supported women's suffrage. Her brother, Henry, married Lucy Stone, who was a very famous women's rights activist. Her little sister, Emily, followed in her footsteps in medicine. Yeah.
Her sister-in-law, Antoinette Brown Blackwell, first female ordained minister in the Protestant denomination. Yeah. They were way ahead of their time. Yeah. And you can trace,
both of her parents seem to be pretty cool. And you can trace the roots of their sensibilities back to their parents. Samuel was a dissenter. He was a Quaker, which is, I guess, a form of Protestantism. But he was definitely, he didn't recognize the sole religious authority of, say, the Church of England or anything like that.
And so, as a result, his children could not go to public school. He said, fine. I've got some money. I'm a prosperous sugar merchant. I'm going to hire the best tutors I can find.
And not only that, I'm going to defy the conventions of England and have these tutors teach my daughters the same stuff that they're going to teach my sons, which is unheard of. But that really formed the basis for especially Elizabeth's progression and education, that she came to expect to be taught, just like she was a boy because of how.
she was raised. Yeah. And by all accounts, her parents were both pretty great. Her dad was a very caring individual. He thought that all kids of any gender should reach their full potential.
Sure. He didn't physically punish his kids, which was weird. at the time. People are like, why aren't you hitting your kids? Yeah.
And he said, I don't believe in it. I've got a switch.
right here. you can borrow. Works really well. You do not have a switch? That's what the deal is.
He.
doesn't have a switch or a paddle. He's switchless. Let's get him a switch. So he, you know, they would have sort of like a demerit system in their house. And if you added up to too many demerits, you would have to do something like eat by yourself in the attic or something.
That sounds horrific, also, like sticking a kid in a closet. But I think it was just a room removed.
from the family dinner. Yeah. It was just, you have to go away from the family. We can't even.
bear to look at you. You make us want to puke. That's right. But everything changed when he lost his sugar refinery in a fire and said, you know what? Let's pack our bags and let's move to New York City.
New York City? That's right. New York City. Do you remember back in,
I don't know, like around 2007, eight, I feel like it was right when we both started working around how stuff works, that a sugar refinery in Savannah blew up. Yeah. I remember that. I wrote an article about that. It's like that sugar dust is volatile.
It can catch fire. And I'm wondering if that's what happened to his sugar refinery. I bet you. Okay. So they moved to New York.
They lived in New York and in Jersey for six years. As you do. Yeah. And one of the cool things that I liked about him, he was a little paradoxical. So he was a sugar refinery.
He made his money off of sugar refining, but the sugar industry was based almost entirely on slave labor around the world. That's how sugar cane was grown. He didn't use slaves. I can tell you that, but he still made his money in an industry that was heavy, heavy on slavery. And in fact, his children were such staunch abolitionists, even as young children, they refused to eat sugar because they knew that slaves had had a hand in producing it.
So they wouldn't even, they wouldn't even eat it as kids. Little kids wouldn't eat sugar because of the slavery involved. But he still made his money off of that. But when he got to America, one of the first things he tried was to introduce sugar beets, which don't require slave labor. That's much less labor intensive process of extracting sugar from sugar beets.
And this was really revolutionary at the time. Like they think they first isolated sugar from beets in 1800, like 30 years before. And they had been introduced to America just like two years before he took this up. So he was on the cutting edge of, of, uh, sugar beet production, but it didn't actually work out very well.
No. Um, he, his original sugar refinery went, um, went South in 1837.. So he said, let me move to Cincinnati and I'll get in on the, on the sugar beet thing. But just a few weeks after they got to Cincinnati in August of 1838, he died of a fever. And because he had lost that sugar refinery and didn't have the next sugar beet operation up and going, they didn't have a lot of dough.
His family was, um, left without a lot of money.
Yeah. Which, I mean, that's gotta be really tough to go from wealthy to not, you know, just one fell swoop. But that's kind of what happened with Elizabeth's family. And, um, a few years later she resolved and she was 21 that she would not be dependent on any man, that she was going to be self-sufficient and she was never going to marry. And she wanted to make her own way.
And I mean, it's pretty tough not to trace that line directly back to, you know, the state that her father left his family in. Um, not in any way that, you know, that was his own doing or his own fault, but that was just the conventions of the time. And so for a woman to, to resolve that she would make her own way in life was very unconventional. But if, if Elizabeth Blackwell was anything, she was very unconventional.
That's right. So she and her mom and a couple of her sisters, they, uh, were teachers for a little while. And she eventually, and we, this is kind of jumping ahead a bit, but she, she did adopt a girl, a seven-year-old Irish immigrant orphan, uh, that she named Kitty. Her name was Catherine Berry and went by Kitty. And she was with her for the duration of her life, but she never got married.
And she decided to become a doctor when she had a really close friend who was dying, said, you know what? I think that I might have lived if I might have had a woman as a doctor, because they're more compassionate and I might've gotten better treatment. And Elizabeth Blackwell was like, whoa, that really speaks to me. Yeah. They, uh, the, they think that the woman was.
probably dying of uterine cancer, and she thinks that she would have, she would have disclosed more of her condition, possibly sooner. And at the very least she would have been more comfortable in her dying days being treated by a woman rather than poked and prodded by some man. Right. Um, who, who seemed to be less compassionate than she believed a woman would be. The, the thing about Elizabeth Blackwell is she, first of all, she was struck by this and she was so struck, struck by it that she, it moved her to want to become a doctor.
But not only that, she had to overcome a natural, deep seated aversion to the idea of the body or anatomy or medicine. Like. she was not at all interested in this to begin with. And in fact, she had an aversion to it, but she was so moved by that woman, um, and her experience that she resolved to overcome her disgust in her aversion at bodily functions and anatomy and become a doctor herself. It's pretty, I mean, that's a really key detail.
It is a hugely, I mean, that's enormous. Like, not only she, like she just wasn't a kid who wanted to be a doctor. Right. Like. I love the.
sight of blood and internal organs. So this kind of fits anyway. Yeah. She had to overcome an.
aversion to it, on top of overcoming the aversion that society had against a woman becoming a doctor. Because at the time it was, it was considered that a woman couldn't know enough about the human body to be a physician and still be considered a morally upright woman, that her morals were at risk of being corrupted just by knowing everything there is to know about.
the human body. Yeah. I mean, let's be honest. They would have to see a male penis as part of their training. Sure.
A PP.
So, oh man, we're such children. We are. So she said, all right, I'm going to do this. I'm going to get over this. I'm going to be a doctor.
How do I do this? I'll just go to medical school. Medical school said, no, no, no, no, no. Women can't go to medical school. Right.
There are a few ladies around the country that are unlicensed physicians that worked as apprentices and learn their trade, but you're not going to go this traditional route. And medical school at the time was just weird anyway,
which we'll get into a little bit later. But we, I mean, we also got into it in our grave robbing episode. This was similar to that time. This was around that time.
It was crazy. It wasn't like, it wasn't the, the, I don't think doctors were as respected back then.
even. No, they, they, no, because they were the ones who were, um, who were cutting open bodies and just kind of figuring stuff out as they went along. And if you went to a doctor, there was like an 80% chance, you were walking out one limb short.
Yeah. So she, uh, while she was a teacher,
she boarded with, um, families and she did a lot of this stuff in the South, which we'll get to as well. But, um, two Southern physicians mentored her. Um, she still could not get into medical school. Of course, she had some physician friends who were Quakers. She asked them about it.
They said, that's a great idea, but no, it costs too much. You're never going to be able to get in. Um, what you should do is disguise yourself as a man and go to France. And she was.
like, not a bad idea. If that's the best advice somebody's giving you, you need to rethink the.
people who you take advice from. It sounds like she was game, though, but, uh, she decided to save money instead and apply to medical, uh, medical school in the United States. So in today dollars, it did the, the, uh, the old inflation calculator, three grand. back then it would be about $85,000 today. Yeah.
So that's a lot of money. And she, between, I think, for a period of two or three years, went South and taught school in slave States, uh, which was very hard for her to do. in order to save money for medical school. She didn't know what she could get into anyway.
Right. Exactly. And the first, the first place she taught in Kentucky, she only lasted a year. She's just found the social climate. So intolerable.
She, she was really, you know, she couldn't put up with it. And I don't know how she was able to better in North and South Carolina, but yeah, I mean, she managed in, in two years to raise 83 grand from teaching, I guess, rich kids in North and South Carolina. And she, she, um, but she also, while she was there, she's like, well, I want to teach the slave kids too. I'll do a pro bono. And they said, well, it's against the law for you to teach slave kids.
And they said, but you can teach them Sunday school. And she said, fine, I'll do that. And there was a great quote that came from her, uh, in a letter to her family in 1845.. And I'm not sure what state she was in, maybe even Kentucky, but she said, I assure you, I felt a little odd sitting down before those degraded little beings, not saying they were naturally degraded, that they had been degraded by other people. I believe, to teach them a religion, which the owners profess to follow whilst violating its very first principles.
It says it all, doesn't it? It really does. She was like, you know, these people are profess to be Christians, but are, do not treat other people like Christians. And that's just such a Quaker thing to do, huh? That is a very Quaker thing to do.
You want to take a little break? Yeah, let's do it. Okay. We're going to take a break, everybody. And we'll be back to tell you more about Elizabeth Blackwell's progress toward med school.
Miss the latest in women's basketball? Don't sweat it. I've got you covered. Welcome to, In Case You Missed It. with Christina Williams, the podcast that's your go-to source for women's hoops.
From buzzer beaters to breaking news, I bring you the highlights, analysis, and expert insights you need to stay ahead of the game. The people have spoken, and it's time to give the stories that matter most the spotlight. It's time to blaze our own path and embrace new voices. From the WNBA, get ready for Asia Wilson and the Las Vegas Aces on a mission for a historic three-peat. Plus, the anticipation is building as Kaitlyn Clark and the talented 2024 rookie class bring a fresh wave of excitement to the league.
And in the world of women's college hoops, the Gamecocks reign supreme. Dawn Staley's squad is unstoppable, but will they stay on top? Listen to In Case You Missed It, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts. Well, Vaughan, the Olympics are underway. It's useless to talk about it as a thing. that's happening in the future. when it's happening in the present.
It's happening now. And what's happening now is our podcast, Two Guys, Five Rings, is a phenomenon. And while real medals are being handed out in Paris, we're giving out our fake medals here. Two Guys, Five Rings. Matt Bowen and the Olympics.
Who are we watching this? Olympic Games? I mean, I'm watching Simone Biles. I'm watching her go higher and higher and higher with every bounce. Sha'Carri's about to run faster than you or I or anyone has ever seen.
I'm rooting for the girls and the boys and everybody under the sand river. Under the sand, over the sand, within the waters of the sand, all of them. Follow the show on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or your favorite podcast platform, and watch and listen to every moment of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games, now through August 11th, on NBC and Peacock, and, for the first time ever, on the iHeartRadio app.
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Sis, are you feeling overwhelmed? You're not alone. I'm Dr. Joy Harden-Bradford, licensed psychologist and host of the Therapy for Black Girls podcast. And I'm bringing candid mental health conversations straight to your podcast feed.
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So, Chuck, like you said, she was mentored by a couple of doctors who she stayed with while she was teaching in North and South Carolina, one of whom was actually a professor of medicine. So he had all the books. He was very encouraging to her. He taught her everything he could. And that was, like you said, a way that a woman could become a physician, but an unlicensed physician.
Certainly not one that was in any way established as an actual legitimate physician. And that was.
ultimately her goal. Yeah. Like she continued to get sort of tutored by different people in the South, that she knew who were physicians. And it was great that these men encouraged her and tutored her, said, here, use my books. But again, like you said, she wanted to do the real deal and forge a path and not just kind of go the backdoor route.
So she applied to all the medical schools in New York and Philly. She applied to 12 more in the Northeast. She was rejected by all of them. And on the 30th application to Geneva Medical College in Western New York in 1847, she was accepted. And I say, I raised my voice because she got accepted, because it was a joke.
that, uh, well, everyone thought it was a practical joke. The professor there, the dean of the medical, the med school, basically said, Hey, let's take a vote here. We'll have all the men here that go here vote on whether or not a woman can come to school here. And if every single person says yes, she can come here. And if one person says no, she won't.
They all thought it was a prank from, I guess, the neighboring rival medical school. So they, West Geneva. Yeah. They said, sure, let her in. And it wasn't a joke.
And they did let her in.
They did. Um, and apparently they were all very surprised. Like this almost sounds like an urban legend, but from what I saw, like, this is across the board, what happened that they, they thought it was a practical joke and it turned out to be real. And that is how she ended up going to medical school. Unbelievable.
So when she showed up, she was taking this quite seriously. She was 26 already. She'd spent some time like living around, seeing the country. Um, just, she was 26.. Like, that says a lot about a person over, say, like 20 or 19 or something like that.
And so she, when she showed up, um, not only was she a little more mature, probably, than some of her contemporaries, she also, um, was, she was well aware of the convention she was breaking, of the challenges and the obstacles that laid ahead of her. Um, and there's a pretty good report. Like the fact that she showed up at medical school, made the papers. And in fact, the Boston medical journal even wrote up something about the fact that, that she was, yeah, that she was there taking medical classes. The Boston medical journal said that she comes into the class with great composure, takes off her bonnet and puts it under the seat, exposing a fine phrenology.
Are you kidding me? You're talking about the shape of her head? Yeah. Yeah. This is the Boston medical journal at the time.
Hopefully the BMJ has, um, has officially, uh, stopped using phrenology in any way, shape or form, but we'll have to,
we'll have to get a subscription and find out. So we talked earlier about the fact that medical school at the time was really different. Um, it sounds like animal house or something. Uh, it was very raucous. Uh, as apparently when they were lecturers, uh, you would make crude jokes out loud and no matter what you're talking about, it sounds like a bunch of children taking sex ed or something.
Yeah. And like the sixth grade. Yeah. But apparently Blackwell's effect on the whole, like every class she went into, was everyone took it a lot more seriously because she.
was there. Yeah. Because again, like if you were a man, you acted far, far, far differently around a woman. Um, at the time where you were just much more genteel, it was just the social convention. And so you had to bite your tongue in a medical school.
If, if, um, Elizabeth Blackwell is in your class, or you just did, that was just kind of the effect that she had on class just by being a. even beyond that, there was this whole view that, like these guys, were somehow contributing to this woman's moral corruption by even being in the same class with her, let alone being the instructor teaching her. Right. And so one of the things she ran into in med school was she would sometimes be asked to go step outside because this particular lecture is a little rough. Yeah.
And Elizabeth Blackwell did not truck to that at all. She was very adamant that, remember, she was educated like a boy by the tutors her father hired. She had a full expectation to be left out of absolutely nothing at med school. She was to be a full physician. And so she was to learn everything that any physician would learn.
And eventually, over time, she kind of overcame this genteel opposition to her presence by her professors and male classmates. Yeah. And.
I think in no small part due to her serious take and her fastidiousness and the fact that, in the end, she graduated first in her class. Yeah, this says a lot. She was the best student. In 1849, she graduated first, ultimately earned the respect of her fellow students, not to say that it was a cakewalk. There were still plenty of jerks there.
And a lot of them had animosity.
toward her. Remember, a cakewalk is racist. Is it really? Yeah. Remember, we did a.
we did a show on what was it? I can't remember the like words that have different origins than you would think, or different meanings than you would think. You remember? Yeah, I think I do remember that.
I'm sorry, everybody. I'm sorry for interrupting you. That's OK. So it was no pie walk.
Well, good, save, Chuck. Still plenty of jerks. There were some men there that would would laugh at her, some in there that would support her, some men that would jeer at her, some men that would help her out. But, like I said, in the end, she she got that degree first in her class, apparently. And I don't know if this is the movie version, but the the medical school's dean bowed to her when she accepted her diploma and everyone busted out in applause.
Yeah, that's what a newspaper account said from the correspondent who was there. And they also added in Brother Bluto became Senator Blutarski. Very nice. That wrapped.
everything up. Do you think that movie ages? well? We're talking about Animal House again.
I haven't. I haven't seen it in a while, I should say. Sorry. You know, in a while, I'm not sure. OK, I have seen it plenty of times, but I haven't seen it in a while.
I'm sure it doesn't. It can't.
I don't know, man. I think it's kind of timeless.
However, I've heard certain people that I won't name say it doesn't age. well. No. Oh, yeah. Yeah.
No, I didn't think you think there's a. there's a raft of comedies from that era that just are not funny. now. Wait, not funny or politically? Oh, no, no, no.
Not funny. Oh, gotcha. It doesn't age well as in like, why is this? Why do people?
think this is a comedy classic? It's not even that good. Gotcha. Gotcha. OK, yeah.
I'll have to watch it again. I haven't. I haven't seen it in a while. I don't know, man. I think it's kind of.
timeless in its comedy. OK. I mean, sure, there are parts that don't age well in every other respect,
like any comedy made before, like four years ago. Sure. That's what I, or no, like. like the last five minutes. I thought that's what you were talking about.
No, I mean, it's entirely possible because I've seen some comedies where I'm like, this is this is not at all funny, like Spies, Like Us.
Give me a break. Not good. No, I haven't seen it in a long time. It's not good. See, now I'm afraid to watch some of those oldies.
Yeah. Chevy Chase, though. I do. My dad taught me well.
But if you, if, if you want to continue to cherish any movie that you used to love, I would not risk it. No, we'll see. Unless it's Ghostbusters, that definitely holds up, friend. Yeah, that new one looks good, too. Was the new one the the sequel sort of.
So it's technically Ghostbusters three.
Yeah. Or four. I mean, we are. Wait, was there a third or was just the first two? Yeah, the second.
one was the first two. And then the third one had like, I think, Kate McKinnon. Yeah, that was.
the lady reboot in a different universe, didn't it? Yeah, yeah. That was. that was just a reboot, which was great, I thought. But this new one is a sequel many years later, and I think it's one of their grandkids.
You know, stuff starts happening. It looks good. Paul Rudd's in it. OK. Oh, and what's his name's?
kid? Reitman's kid is directing it. It's oh, he's great. Jason. Yeah,
it's a Jason Reitman jam. So that's good stuff. Yeah, that might. he might be a little too high highbrow for a Ghostbusters. I don't know, man.
Well, hey, I can tell you, you know, who's spinning in her grave right now about a thousand RPMs? Who? Elizabeth Blackwell. I know.
I'm so sorry, Dr. Blackwell. Should we take a break? I don't know. Who knows anymore?
All right, let's take a break and we'll stop talking about dumb old movies right after this.
Miss the latest in women's basketball? Don't sweat it. I've got you covered. Welcome to, In Case You Missed It, with Christina Williams, the podcast that's your go to source for women's hoops. From buzzer beaters to breaking news, I bring you the highlights, analysis and expert insights you need to stay ahead of the game.
The people have spoken and it's time to give the stories that matter most the spotlight. It's time to blaze our own path and embrace new voices. From the WNBA, get ready for Asia Wilson and the Las Vegas Aces on a historic three-peat. Plus, the anticipation is building as Kaitlyn Clark and the talented 2024 rookie class bring a fresh wave of excitement to the league. And in the world of women's college hoops, the Gamecocks reign supreme.
Dawn Staley's squad is unstoppable, but will they stay on top? Listen to, In Case You Missed It, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your.
podcasts. Well, Bowen, the Olympics are underway. It's useless to talk about it as a thing. that's happening in the future. when it's happening in the present.
It's happening now. And what's happening now is our podcast, Two Guys, Five Rings is a phenomenon. And while real medals are being handed out in Paris, we're giving out our fake medals here. Two Guys, Five Rings, Matt Bowen and the Olympics. Who are we watching this?
Olympic Games? I mean, I'm watching Simone Biles. I'm watching her go higher and higher and higher with every bounce. Sha'Carri's about to run faster than you or I or anyone has ever seen. I'm ready for the girls and the boys and everybody under the Seine River.
Under the Seine, over the Seine, within the waters of the Seine, all of them. Follow the show on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or your favorite podcast platform, and watch and listen to every moment of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games now, through August 11th, on NBC and Peacock and, for the first time ever, on the iHeartRadio app.
Between work, the gym, family, I am overwhelmed. Sis, are you feeling overwhelmed? You're not alone.
I'm Dr. Joy Harden-Bradford, licensed psychologist and host of the Therapy for Black Girls podcast, and I'm bringing candid mental health conversations straight to your podcast feed. We'll unpack everything from conquering imposter syndrome to nurturing your friendships. Join me and my expert guests as we explore mental health and personal development. Whether you're just starting your mental health journey, entering motherhood, thinking about becoming a therapist, or just trying to show up as the best possible version of yourself, listen to Therapy for Black Girls on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Greetings, ghouls and girls, and welcome to Haunting, Purgatory's premiere podcast for all things afterlife. I'm your host, Tereza.
We'll be bringing you different ghost stories each week, straight from the person who experienced it.
firsthand. Some will be unsettling. When she was with her imaginary friend, she would turn and look at you, and you felt like something else was looking at you too. Some unnerving. The more I looked at it, I realized that the some looked more like a claw, like a demon.
Some even downright terrifying.
The things that I saw, heard, felt in that house were purely demonic. But all of them will be totally true.
Listen to Haunting on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you live and get your.
podcasts.
All right, so Chuck, I think where we officially left off, Elizabeth Blackwell received her diploma. The dean of the medical school stood up and bowed, and the auditorium broke out into applause, which is pretty awesome.
Apparently, although she won over her classmates, there were still, like a lot of women actually at the time, who were not very happy with what she'd done. But she said, nuts to you guys. I'm going to move to Paris and London and I'm going to pursue my practice.
there to start. That's right, which is a great idea. And when she got there, they said, wow, you're a real deal, doctor, and you have a medical degree. Here, be a midwife. Yeah, a woman, sacre bleu.
Yeah, she was. she was led into midwifery and nursing. But she's like, really sort of trying to be revolutionary here, because all she sees are these men walking around not washing their hands at all. And she's like, you know, what is probably super important is personal hygiene and preventative care. And they're like, what's that?
Well, they literally were. What's.
that? Because this was early 1850s. And remember our great stink episode? Oh, man, that was so good. So they were still operating under the miasma theory that it was like bad vapors and smells that made you sick.
Crazy. So her idea that it was like handwashing was part of this preventative medicine was really ahead of its time. And so, in addition to being a woman, who they were just discrediting out of hand anyway, just for being a woman, they were also saying, like, you're talking kooky stuff. Everybody knows it smells that make you sick, you nut job. Go over there and deliver.
a baby. And she's like, but I haven't washed my hands. We just told you it doesn't matter. Babies are dirty. As long as your hands don't stink, it's fine.
Yeah, we should also mention it's right about here, where she lost sight in her left eye from an accident that I can barely even talk about.
Oh, I want to. Can I? Please. So she contracted purulent ophthalmia, which is an infection of the eye. And her eye became infected because she was tending to an infant who I guess had some sort of wound, that was infected and pus squirted in her left eye from the infection and infected her left eye to such a terrible degree that she became blind in her left eye.
Yes. And that is that is sad, but really sad, because she was not able to become a surgeon,
which is what she really wanted to do. It's also said that there was a baby with an infection. Well, sure. A pussy infection. Let's forget about that, baby.
Sure. That baby grew up to be Roy Cohn.
She. she moved to the. that's really good. She moved to the UK, then from Paris. And this is where she hooked up with a little buddy named Florence Nightingale.
Yeah, who deserves her own episode, too. Oh, sure. Totally. They became good friends. They were, like, you, like to wash your hands?
I do, too. Isn't it awesome? Let's go do it together. That's kind of the long and short of it. They sat around saying ABCs or I don't want no scrubs.
Wash your hands. I don't want no scrubs. Wash their hands. And they were both like, why are none of these men doctors ever washing their hands?
And they were both like, because they're dummies. Yeah. Just give them a few years and germ theory will be developed and then they'll listen to Louis Pasteur. Yeah, exactly. But I think that's pretty awesome.
It's almost like, I don't know, Einstein and somebody else meeting, you know, like this. It's cool to know that these, these two like legendary figures, met and were friends at one point in time. Oh, totally. It's almost like a movie. You know what I'm saying?
This totally should be a movie. I'm surprised it's not yet. Agreed. Maybe Jason Reitman could direct it.
That's right. And maybe.
Paul Rudd? No, who's the guy that Wolverine?
Hugh Jackman. Yeah,
maybe Hugh Jackman can be in it. He would play Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell. That's right. And Jared from Subway can play the puss, baby.
Yeah, everything would come full circle and the.
universe would collapse in on itself. And then the Sharknado would kill them all. Yeah. Oh, man. So she is pals with Laurence Nightingale.
She decides, you know what, I'm going to go back to New York. It's 1851.. And I really want to get a practice going there. She got back. And of course, discrimination against women in the doctoring industry was still there.
Oh, yeah. So she didn't have a lot of opportunities. She didn't have a lot of patients. She didn't have a lot of other doctors that she could even exchange ideas with.
And so she started applying for jobs instead of starting her own practice at the women's department in a big city dispensary. But she was not.
She was not hired. No. And I had to look up a dispensary is like a charity or public clinic. So this woman's ambition, yeah, this woman's ambition, this first woman doctor in the United States. now, her ambition was to help the poor.
That was, that was what she wanted to do. Her missions in life were to help the poor, help women retain their chastity and purity in the hopes of having a good moral impact on the world around them, and then to make it so that more women could become doctors. That's right. Like she was like a tireless fighter and champion of all of these things. That's right.
And so, in typical Elizabeth Blackwell fashion, when she was turned down for a job at a dispensary, she just opened her own dispensary. That's right. And a little single.
rented room. She saw patients a few afternoons each week. It was incorporated in 1854 where they moved to a small house there on the lower east side, east village area of Tompkins Square. Her sister, we mentioned that she followed, I believe, at the very beginning that she followed in her sister's footsteps. By this point, she was Dr.
Emily Blackwell. She got her degree at Western Reserve University in Cleveland, and she joined her in 1856 with another doctor, Dr. Marie.
Zakrzewska.
Wow. That's the Dr. Seuss pronunciation. That's a tough one. I would say Zakrzewska.
Okay. Zakrzewska. All right. And they all opened the New York infirmary for women and children on Bleecker Street there in the west village in 1857.. Yep.
And now you can go, left out of the.
doorway and hit a Swatch store, or go across the street and go get a sandwich at Le Pan Quotidien.
I saw the Swatch joke coming because I did the old Google Earth too. And I was like,
I guarantee you that poked out to Josh. But what's crazy, so 64, at least as far as the Google company is concerned, 64, Bleecker Street doesn't exist anymore. But that means that it was subsumed by either the kith clothing or the Swatch store. Somebody took over this. I think the Swatch store did in 1858..
Yeah, they were all on chains. Right. But there's a physical structure that's still there. that was the first women-run infirmary or clinic, I should say, in New York. and what became one of the first women's medical schools.
Amazing. In the country, not the first, but one of the first. And there's no plaque, there's no sign, there's no, nothing. Really? But the building is that, not that I could see, but the building is still there.
You can still visit the spot where poor people went and Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell treated them. Wow. Yeah,
with one eye. Yeah. Let's not forget that. A sight in one eye, I should say. So she starts going, England too, my home country.
I'm going to go back and forth. I'm going to try and raise some money to do the same thing over there. At the same time, she's also taking on, and it's amazing what you can do when you don't get married and have to be subservient to a man. Right. She was living single, so she had nothing but time.
She had this adopted daughter, but I imagine as she grew,
she helped her mom out with this stuff. Yeah. And in their off time, they would watch Living Single.
together.
So she was getting on other social reform movements, all kinds of things to do with women's rights, family planning, even way back then, hygiene. always. Did we mention eugenics.
and how deep she got in. that? Do we even know? I looked and I could not see, because you would think there'd be people that would say like, oh, Elizabeth Blackwell, but listen to this eugenics stuff she's into. I saw basically one of those things where this list was repeated basically in the same order across the internet.
So I have no idea how much she was into eugenics, but I do know, I did get an impression of her, as far as women's rights were concerned, she was a feminist through and through. Oh, sure. Absolutely a feminist, but she was also a moralist and a prude, a dyed in the wool prude. And so she was really concerned with the.
moral purity. Yeah, I guess the moral purity of women, because her whole thing was, if a woman has basically had sex out of wedlock, she has corrupted her morals. She's traded in her morals. And now she's going to be interested in men. She's going to think about other men rather than her husband.
She's not going to be able to focus on her home. And so the home will start to come apart, because this woman had sex out of wedlock before she got married or whatever. And so that's one home broken. And if more and more women do this, then all of a sudden the whole country's morals are corrupt. And there's nothing but crime and drinking and all sorts of horrible things that come out of it.
And she definitely identified men as an aggressor in this, that it was definitely men who came along and persuaded girls to have sex out of wedlock, because these girls were too naive to know the ramifications and consequences. So she tried to, in books and pamphlets and lectures and all this, warn mothers to warn their daughters away from men like this and also teach them about the consequences of having premarital sex. And also basically identifying as men, as the aggressors, the wolves in the situation. But so she was super into that and she was very widely and well-received because her line of thinking was very in line with Victorian, super rigid morals. But at the same time, I mean, it's difficult to reconcile with just straight ahead feminism that, you know, of the type that we're used to today.
But there's really no one who could discredit her as a feminist. She's a feminist in a Victorian way.
Exactly. It was a time where you couldn't be like, girl, own your sexuality. And, like you, asked the man to marry you. Like. that just didn't happen at all.
So this was the opposite of that when she.
was touting. She was also what would be known today as a feminist for life, a staunch anti-abortion feminist. As a matter of fact, if you read her diary in a certain way, you can make the case that one of the reasons she became a doctor is because she read an article about a woman who was an abortionist at the time, who was termed a female physician, which I guess was code for women abortionists back then. And she was so appalled by this that she wanted to reform the term female physician to mean an actual, like just a woman doctor, a general doctor. And that's one of the things that drove her, too.
So, yeah, she was a very complicated character. She was a Quaker. Reminds us. Right. But I think she reminds us that over time, when you become a legend, you know, a legend grows up around you and, you know, the different edges get, you know, smoothed over or overlooked or whatever.
And people are complicated and complex. And that's the way that it should be. And they should be understood as such, you know. Yeah. But none of that under undermines her, depending on your way of thinking.
I don't think anything undermines her that she did or thought undermines the work that she did and the good that she did.
Well, of course not. And I think maybe people should try to remember what it might be like to be a trailblazing feminist in the 1840s through the 80s, you know. Yeah. So the Civil War, that was very nicely said. Good job.
I hope so. Oh, God.
Civil War rolls around. She and her sisters train nurses for the Union for their hospitals. She said, you know what? What we really need is a medical school for women. And so she continued to try and get support from Britain.
She finally raised enough backing in America to add that medical school to her women's hospital in New York in 1868.
. This was this one you were talking about? The New York infirmary was finally established with 15 students, nine faculty. And she was the professor of hygiene. And her sister, Emily, was fine.
Yes. Taught was the outwell taught obstetrics.
and diseases of women. Yeah. She handled all the surgery to at the clinic. Oh, Emily did? Yeah.
Because her sister couldn't. Right. But so think about this. Like she established not just this clinic, this dispensary, but also a college to teach women doctors. Right.
And not only did she do that in New York, she did it in London, too. After she had managed to establish this, she said, OK, Emily, you got this. I'm moving back to England and I'm going to do this over here.
Yeah. And what it did? was it provided about a 32 year stopgap, until 1899 when medical schools, Cornell University, finally began accepting women into their program. So for 32 years, she was running the show and she was providing that almost said service. But it kind of is in a way, you know, until medical, until mainstream medical schools began catching on.
Yeah,
no, for sure. And the fact that that she was establishing this college, like that this was one of her big dreams and focuses and drives, just kind of goes to underscore the fact that, like she, she was trying to make it so that more women could become doctors. Yeah, that's just. it's just easy to overlook when you're like, oh, well, she went and became a doctor herself, and then she did doctoring. She also, simultaneously, was trying to expand access to medical training for women as well to become a licensed physician.
And she did in a big way in 1869, when she was in her late 40s. She this is when she established the London practice. She had passed on the New York Medical College to her sister at that point and founded the National Health Society in 1871 and was one of the first champions of prevention is better than cure, which is a very obviously important thing today in all of medicine. But at the time, it was kind of a revolutionary kind of way to go about things. They were all about cures.
And she was one of the first people standing up and be like, hey, let's not get to the point where we need to cure by preventing things with handwashing and lifestyle and hygiene. Yeah. Wash your hands. Yeah. What's your problem?
In 1870, she finally set up a private practice in London and in 1874, along with physician Sophia Jax Blake and Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, established that London School of Medicine for Women. Yeah. So again, she did this in New York.
She also did it in London. She agitated for legislation to be passed in 1876 to allow women to get medical degrees. She was the first woman added to the medical register in England. Yeah. So she did this in two continents.
She opened up the door for women to become doctors on two different continents at about the same time. And ultimately, she had to stop practicing. She had to stop seeing patients because she had something called biliary colic, which is where gallstone blocks the bile duct, which is not good for you. And apparently, it's a very painful condition. And especially back then, before they could do a lot with it or break it up with lasers or something, it could knock you out of your career.
And it did for decades. I think she had biliary colic 20 or 30 years before she died. Yeah. She basically didn't practice for the last 20 years.
Yeah. And very sadly, in 1907, at the ripe old age of 86, which is great, um, she had an accident. She fell down a flight of stairs and was mentally and physically disabled after that, lived a few more years after that, uh, and then eventually died of stroke in 1910..
Yeah. That was a great, great lady. Yeah. There's this statistic here in 1881.. Um, so she'd moved to the UK permanently in 1869..
In 1881, there were only 25 registered women doctors in England and Wales, but 30 years later, 1911, it was up to 495.
. There you have it. Now. I would guess that there's at least double that. Probably, more.
Probably so. So hats off to Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell. Um, way to go. My bonnet is off and under my seat.
Oh, that's a fine phrenology. You've just exposed there, Charles. Thank you. Uh, if you want to know more about Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, there's a lot of good stuff on the internet, including a site that we used, among others, famous scientists.org.
Check them out. And scientist is plural. I just have a thick tongue. So sometimes it's tough to add that extra S at the end. And since I said I have a thick tongue,
it's time for listener mail.
Uh, this is from Isaac. Hey guys, I am on day two of six weeks of staying home in quarantine. I live in Seattle, Washington, which was the place where the first North American coronavirus case was. There have been rumors at my school. I'm in the seventh grade that would close for cleaning, but six weeks is nearly all of third quarter.
Yeah. I've got a long stretch of time ahead of me and I've spent most of that time playing video games. Great reading. Great. Okay.
And listening to stuff you should know. Nice. That's a nice three pronged approach. Little fun, little knowledge and little goofy knowledge. Sure.
Uh, I listened to nearly 10 episodes today alone. There'll be plenty more rushing through my ear holes. So I wanted to say thank you for helping me through a worrisome time. I loved the Seattle show that is from Isaac. Isaac, buddy, glad we're there for you.
Hang in there. Be safe. Uh, wash your hands. Yeah. And the fact that you use the word ear holes means that you're.
the coolest kid I know. Yeah. You're pretty cool, Isaac. We appreciate that. I wonder what video.
game. he's playing, Chuck. I don't know. I just finished red dead redemption and now I'm onto a.
new one. I've been gaming a bit lately. I heard that red dead redemption is like one of the most amazing games ever, but it's just so good and highbrow, like a Jason Reitman film, that it's, it's boring. Unlike a Jason Reitman film. Have you heard that?
Well, I played part two. I did.
not get the first one, although I might go back. I think it was part two that I'm talking about.
I enjoyed it. Okay, good. Good. I'm glad to hear that, because I like to think that things that are.
well done aren't boring, you know? Yeah. I had to learn to shoot animals, and which was not fun, but hunting is a part of it. Really? Yeah.
I never shot a bunny, though. Maybe you had to like put.
them out of the misery or something cause they were rabid. Oh, that too. If you have a, if you.
crash your horse, you might have to do the right thing. You know what I mean? Is that right? You have to strangle it? Yeah.
It's very sad, because you get very attached to these horses. I'll bet.
Do you name them? Yeah. You name them. Like you'd actually name them for fun, or like they come with names, or they like the game makes you name your horse. When you go to a stable, you can upgrade.
your horse in a lot of ways with the saddles and stuff. And then you can also, you can also name your horse when you go to a stable and type it in, and then your horse name is up there. Did you name any Josh? I did not. I feel bad now.
I had three or four horses and I named them all variations of my wife and daughter's names, but you'll be next. I appreciate that, but you'll be like, oh yeah,
Josh turned lame. I guess I have to put him out of his misery. Yeah. Josh got run over by a train. Let me know how Josh turns out.
Okay. In video game. I will. Okay. And Isaac, thanks again for writing in and, like Chuck said, stay safe, stay smart and wash your hands and don't panic.
It doesn't sound like you are. If you're like Isaac and you're hanging out, listening to Stuff, You Should Know, we want to hear from you. You can send us an email, wrap it up, spank it on the bottom and send it off to stuffpodcasts at iheartradio.com.
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