Friday, November 28, 2014

Windsor County Court, October 14


Zachary Allen, DOB 6/8/92, pled not guilty to charges of unlawful mischief and possession of a depressant, stimulant, or narcotic, in Windsor on August 17. You can read more about these charges here: http://eagletimes.villagesoup.com/p/two-men-cited-for-shooting-paintballs-at-road-signs/1255541

Dale Griswold, DOB 3/22/64, was charged with lewd and lascivious behavior with a child, and possession of child pornography, in Weston on January 1 You can read more about these charges here: http://www.vermonttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/RH/20140111/NEWS02/701119916

Shania Rawson, DOB 3/19/97, pled not guilty to burglary of an occupied dwelling in Hartford on August 21

Jennifer Deforge, DOB 9/24/83, pled guilty to a charge of unlawful trespass in Hartford on August 21

Ramhance Rampersaud, DOB 8/1/66, pled not guilty to charges of prohibited acts, unlawful trespass, and disorderly conduct/language in Norwich on September 4

Donna Purdy, DOB 2/25/61, pled not guilty to a charge of her first DUI, in Bridgewater on October 7.

Brian Sanville, DOB 9/2/87, pled guilty to a charge of possession of a narcotic in Hartford on August 30

Robert Worrall, DOB 6/13/93, pled not guilty to a charge of unlawful mischief in Windsor on August 17

William Wolf, DOB 5/17/75, was charged with having weapons in court, in Hartford on May 13

Stephen Bushey, DOB 4/11/72, pled not guilty to charges of driving with a suspended license, and his second DUI, in Hartford on September 24

Joan Whitney, DOB 12/25/46, pled guilty to a charge of careless and negligent operation of a motor vehicle, in Springfield on October 4

Chris Connolly, DOB 10/24/71, pled not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Bethel on August 19

Alec Carvlin, DOB 5/2/93, pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Hartford on October 4

Krista Wall, DOB 6/12/81, was charged with 2 assaults on a law officer, an assault on a law officer with bodily fluids, disorderly conduct/fight, and 2 charges of violating conditions of release in Springfield on October 13. Read more about these charges here: http://www.vermonttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/RH/20141018/NEWS02/710189951

Windsor County Crime Online:


Aaron McCoy, age 45, of White River Junction http://www.timesargus.com/article/20141016/NEWS03/710169925

Nathan Smith and Joseph Smith


 
Nathan Smith, a Vermont farmer’s son, became a doctor and started his medical practice in Cornish, New Hampshire, marrying Elizabeth Chase, Jonathan Chase’s daughter.  When Elizabeth died, Nathan married her sister Sally.  Unsatisified with the apprenticeship system of training doctors, Nathan applied to the Trustees of Dartmouth College for approval of a medical school and after a year or so delay, the Dartmouth Medical School was established.  Although not especially lucrative for a doctor who had a steadily growing family, both Nathan and the medical school thrived, until a court case involving grave robbery.

                Nathan felt that Dartmouth College was not doing enough to help him procure the specimens necessary to conduct the dissections he felt were so important a part of a medical student’s education. He also thought the college should have been more generous in giving the medical school money for the textbooks and equipment he needed to conduct his classes. Nathan was a big believer in hands-on experience in medical training, in an era when most medical instruction consisted of just lectures.  We know that Dartmouth College was strapped for cash during its first years, but it may also have been that the trustees felt that Nathan’s methods were ridiculous.  Then, there is the inescapable fact that dissection of cadavers was illegal.

When school was not in session, Nathan traveled amazing distances treating patients and performing surgery.  It is understandable that Sally would not want to move households to follow her husband in his endeavors, since he was all over the place anyway.  His granddaughter-in-law Emily Smith, in her book “The Life and Letters of Dr. Nathan Smith”, includes a letter dated April 20, 1811. Nathan wrote to his friend and former student George Shattuck. Nathan starts out, “I intended to spend this winter in Boston, but in reviewing my affairs found them such as required my presence at home.”  Really?  Possibly because his wife was raising eight children there by herself?  For all the times Mrs. Smith remarks on his tenderness toward his children and his family, it does not seem very tender to leave them in Hanover and spend the winter in Boston. In several of his letters to Mr. Shattuck, he describes journeys to Bath, Coos, Weathersfield, Charlestown, Boston, Merrimack, Concord, and Exeter.

Apparently George was a bill collector for Nathan, or maybe just his emissary in Boston.  In any case, much of Nathan’s correspondence to George consisted of asking – actually, more accurately, commanding – him to collect one note or another.  He also used George as a social secretary as well, asking him to ask other people if they are coming to visit him, giving dates when he is going to be home (not many), and offering alternate sites for visits in Concord or Boston. Many of these proposed social visits appeared to involve the collection of money owed – a “bring me my money and stay for dinner” kind of arrangement. Certainly it was fair that Nathan collect the money he was owed, especially with a family of eight children. The arresting thing about these letters is that their tone is so imperious, and you wonder if Nathan was giving Mr. Shattuck any money for being his emissary in Boston and southern New Hampshire.  My guess is that he did not.

Ill feelings still lingered in Nathan regarding the court case, and the general difficulties in getting dissection specimens in rural New Hampshire. The political situation in New Hampshire was not encouraging to the funding of education. It is interesting to note that Dartmouth College was petitioning the New Hampshire legislature for funds.  This is why Nathan went to Concord.  He often attended sessions of legislature to lobby for funding for the medical school. Yale College in New Haven, Connecticut had been putting out feelers to Nathan, recruiting him to teach at their newly established medical school and Nathan began leaning in that direction.  He sent both Ryno and Solon to Yale to medical school, and, in 1812, Yale offered him a position on the faculty at the medical school. 

Before he could leave for Yale, the Upper Valley was hit by an epidemic of Typhoid Fever, and Nathan, who had treated patients successfully in many previous outbreaks of typhoid, felt compelled to stay in Hanover, especially when his wife and three of his children came down with it.

In West Lebanon, a ten year old boy was suffering from a bone infection in his leg that he had gotten as a result of having typhoid. He was in excruciating pain and when his mother called in their family doctor, the doctor said his leg would have to be amputated. This type of bone infection is called osteomyelitis in 2014, and is treated with antibiotics.  My nephew had it, and was hospitalized for two days, then discharged with a fanny pack of IV antibiotics that he had to wear 24/7 for at least a week.

Nathan had been treating this type of bone infection for at least two years, by excising the dead bone and draining the infection from the area. The boy went to school with several of Nathan’s kids, and his mother, Lucy Smith, (no relation) contacted Nathan and asked him if he could come and take a look at her son, and hopefully save his leg. It is unclear whether or not she knew that Nathan was an expert at this kind of bone infection.  It is  more likely that she knew he was a very accomplished physician and surgeon and possibly more able to help her son than the local doctor who had prescribed amputation.

Nathan came and performed surgery on Lucy’s son, bringing ten medical students to observe the operation.  Often, patients were brought to the medical school to have operations at the medical school, on a table in the lecture hall.  Probably due to his age and the amount of pain he was in, Nathan operated at his home.  Lucy’s mother described the operation. “ The surgeons commenced operating by boring into the bone of his leg, first on the one side where it was affected, then on the other side, after which they broke it off with a pair of forceps or pincers. Thus they took away large pieces of bone.” Keep in mind that this whole procedure was accomplished on a ten year old without anesthesia.

Accounts of Nathan’s operation on Lucy Smith’s son, in West Lebanon, New Hampshire in 1813 can readily be found online by googling “Dr. Nathan Smith and Joseph Smith”.  The ten year old was Joseph Smith, future founder of the Mormon religion.  The Mormons consider it very significant that Nathan was the only surgeon in the country who was performing this procedure, almost one hundred years before it became standard practice in World War I. They believe that it was God’s divine intervention that put Joseph in school with Nathan’s children during that Typhoid Fever epidemic, and thus gave him access to the only doctor who could save his leg.

After the Typhoid Fever had passed, Nathan joined his sons at Yale Medical School and began his career at Yale, again leaving Sally and the rest of the children behind while he established himself there. A letter from Nathan to Sally, reprinted in its entirety in Emily Smith’s book, has Nathan yet again missing Sally and the children, promising never to leave them again. “I fear my absence has been severely felt by you and the children.  For my own part, I have had a dreary winter of it. You may rest assured that I will never leave you and the children for so long a time again during my lifetime. I think I will be able to get home by the middle of April.” In that same letter, he describes a situation between Solon and a cook in the kitchen.  “We have been having some difficulty in the school between the cooks and the scholars. A cook abused one of the scholars in the kitchen and the scholars put him under the pump and pumped him, as it is called. I think, however, it will be settled without difficulty. Solon is one who helped to pump the cook, but so many assisted in the thing that the blame will be light on individuals.  No doubt the fact that Solon was Nathan’s son also helped with the “light blame”.

 Notwithstanding all the legal difficulties surrounding dissection, Dartmouth College was loathe to let Nathan go.  Oliver Hayward, in his biography of Nathan, “Improve, Perfect  and Perpetuate”, states that students were drawn to the medical school by the reputation of Dr. Smith.  Most of them hated Hanover because it was way out in the middle of nowhere, and the weather was miserable – cold in the winter and hot, humid and buggy in the summer. Dartmouth College was concerned that the Medical School would not survive the defection of its founder.

Three years later, Sally and the kids still had not moved to Connecticut.  Nathan had to return home in 1815 when his daughter Sally died. This was the first death in the family, and by all accounts it hit Nathan hard. Regardless, he left Sally in Hanover and returned to New Haven for another year.  In 1816 he went back and gave a series of well-attended lectures at Dartmouth.  This was the last time he taught in Hanover.  Sally and the kids finally joined Nathan in New Haven in 1817, and Sally gave birth to her last child, a girl, Sally, born in 1819.  Interestingly enough, although they lived in New Haven at the time, all records at Ancestry.com show that Sally was born in Cornish, as were all of her siblings but one, who was born in Hanover.  Sally must have returned to Cornish to have the baby.  Since both of her parents were dead by then, she must have had the baby at a siblings’ house.

Nathan established two more medical schools, one in Maine and one at the University of Vermont. Although Sally visited both Maine and Vermont, the move from Hanover to New Haven was the last one she made. Nathan died in New Haven in 1829 at age 66, of what appears to have been a stroke. Sally died in Springfield, Massachusetts twenty years later and was buried in New Haven.  She may have been living with her next youngest son James, at the time, because he is listed as living in Springfield, Massachusetts in 1850. 

None of Nathan’s children lived in the Upper Valley as adults.  The boys became doctors, the girls all married and had children.  Every one of them gave one of their children “Chase” as a middle name, and most of them had a daughter named “Sally”.

Ezekiel Cushing. You can read “Improve, Perfect and Perpetuate” at the Howe library in Hanover. Emily Smith’s biography of her grandfather-in-law, “The Life and Letters of Nathan Smith”, is available online, as is Nathan’s “Medical and Surgical Memoir. http://books.google.com/books?id=QaoaAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false (Life and Letters)

 

 


Ezekiel Cushing, the medical student arrested and charged with grave robbing, went on to become a doctor in Plymouth, Massachusetts.  He did die young, at age 38.

Nathan may very well be related to Simeon Ide (see Simeon’s story in my posts of late fall 2012/ early winter 2013). Nathan’s mother’s maiden name was Ide, originally from Rehoboth, Massachusetts, as was Simeon’s family (and mine as well). Simeon and Nathan came from the same area of Vermont.

The founder of Gifford Hospital in Randolph had his own experiences with grave robbing.  You can read about it here: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter03/pdf/Grave_Robber_Good_Doc.pdf

 

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Windsor County Court September 23


Aaron Wheeler, DOB 8/16/77, pled not guilty to a charge of retail theft in Springfield on July 26.  He also pled not guilty to charges of his second DUI and test refusal, also on July 26.

Jill McGrath, DOB 1/24/68, pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault in Stockbridge on August 16

David Bogosian, DOB 9/1/90, pled guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Windsor on September 2

Julianne Wood, DOB 1/2/61, pled not guilty to a charge of operating a vehicle with gross or reckless negligence in Woodstock on July 30

Dustin Lockerby, DOB 9/21/97, pled not guilty to a charge of sexual assault in Springfield on July 6

Frank Wilcox, DOB 12/24/80, was charged with disorderly conduct and obstructing traffic in Hartford on August 7

Jennifer Homa DOB 1/24/84, pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault/mutual affray in Stockbridge on August 16

Mikheal Pearsons, DOB 6/9/79, was charged with operating a vehicle with a suspended license in Sharon on August 12

Travis Barton, DOB 7/4/81, pled guilty to a charge of operating a vehicle with a suspended license in Weathersfield on July 31. He also pled guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Windsor on July 28

James Coutermarsh, DOB 10/18/65, pled guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Hartford on September 14

 

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Grave Robbing at Dartmouth


Nathan Smith, the founder of Dartmouth Medical School, started his medical practice in Cornish, New Hampshire.  His wife was Sally Chase, daughter of Jonathan Chase, Revolutionary War colonel and founder of the Windsor-Cornish Bridge.  For several years, Nathan had two residences.  He rented a room in Hanover to be close to Dartmouth, but also maintained a household in Cornish, where Sally was raising their children.
                In 1803, Dartmouth College offered Nathan a raise if he would move his family to Hanover and establish a permanent residence there. Maybe they felt that Nathan was unable to fully attend to his the teaching and management of the medical school with a family so far away in Cornish.  By 1803, he had four children in Cornish, Solon, age 8; Ryno, age 7; Sally, age 4; Gratia, age 1, and just before the end of the year, on December 30, Sally had another baby, a girl, Mary.
                It was another two years before Sally and the kids moved to Hanover with Nathan.  In the meantime, it appears that they moved from a house Sally’s father owned in Cornish to a house in Windsor, where the brood of five children was joined by nine medical students. Sally’s father Jonathan died in 1801 and the house was probably sold after his death.  When he died, Sally and Nathan inherited some land in Cornish and Vermont, but they did not inherit the house they had been living in.
                We know that Sally moved to Hanover in 1805 because there are surviving bills of sale that show that she bought feather beds, chairs, desks, tables, cutlery and dishes in Hanover to furnish her house in Hanover, leading Nathan’s biographer Oliver Hayward to believe that prior to their move to Hanover, not only were they living in Jonathan’s house, but that most of their household furnishings were owned by him as well.     
                Nathan strongly believed that a medical school education should include the dissections of human bodies. Human dissection was illegal during this time, and subjects for dissection had to be smuggled into medical schools.  In large cities, it was easier to obtain bodies than in rural areas like the Upper Valley.  When possible, Nathan tried to have bodies sent up from Boston, but this was difficult and expensive.  Sometimes he had no alternative but to resort to grave robbing, punishable with a $2,000 fine, two years in prison and fifty lashes.
                Certainly Nathan did not rob graves himself.  Unlike the graverobbing depicted in “Tom Sawyer”, however, he didn’t hire criminals to do it, either.  He hired one of his medical students. The situation got very dicey around the time Sally finally moved to Hanover. Nathan had made arrangements to send a medical student to Boston to pick up the body of a young boy and bring it back to Hanover for dissection.  The student, Ezekiel Cushing, heard that a boy of about that same age had recently died in Enfield, and thought that the job would be quicker and more lucrative if he just went to Enfield, dug up the recently deceased body, and brought it back to Hanover.  He convinced several of his buddies to go with him, and the deed was done.
                On the way back to Hanover, carrying the body he had just taken from its grave in the back of a wagon under some hay, Ezekiel was so rattled when he paid a toll at a tollhouse that he left his wallet behind.  The wallet contained a letter about the grave of a 10 year old boy in Enfield. The man at the tollhouse notified the sheriff who went to check on the grave, and of course, found that the body was missing.
                The sheriff came knocking at the doors of the medical school. He had a warrant and searched the place. The students had been warned and quickly hid the body in a closet, but during the search, the sheriff opened the door to the closet and the body fell right out on top of him. Of course, during all of this, Nathan was nowhere to be found. When the sheriff found the body, the guys that were there convinced him not to do anything by threatening that the entire student body would “tear him limb from limb”, according to  Oliver Hayward in his book “Improve, Perfect and Perpetuate”, his biography of Nathan. One of the students was carrying a pistol, and he made sure the sheriff saw it.
 Although the sheriff did not take any actions that night, Ezekiel was charged with grave robbery and went to trial at the courthouse in Haverhill, New Hampshire, where he swore under oath that he never procured any human bodies for dissection, nor did Nathan Smith ever request him to procure a subject from Boston. Ezekiel never served time or received any consequences for grave robbery (or perjury).  Nathan Smith was questioned at the trial – and almost certainly committed perjury along with his student – and was never charged or convicted of procuring bodies or carrying out dissections.
The obvious question is – how and why did Nathan and his students get caught robbing graves and get away with it? I thought at first that the sheriff found the body in the closet but couldn’t prove who had taken it.  When I reread the story, I realized that the wallet tied Ezekiel with the body, and provided a date and even a time.  It would seem like an open and shut case.  Did Nathan bribe someone?  Were the courts just really sympathetic toward grave robbers and medical science?  I can hardly imagine that was the case, especially with a jury made up of New Hampshire farmers. Was the sheriff really as intimidated by a bunch of medical students as Hayward portrays in his book? 

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Teaching Medicine at Dartmouth


                The founder of the Dartmouth Medical School, Nathan Smith, started his medical practice in Cornish.  His wife was the daughter of Jonathan Chase, Revolutionary War Colonel and founder of the Cornish-Windsor bridge.  Doctors were not plentiful in the North Country at the time, and as Nathan’s reputation as an excellent doctor and surgeon grew, he found that he often had several apprentices working with him.  Nathan had studied at Harvard, and considered the apprenticeship system to be vastly inferior to a high quality formal medical education.  He approached the trustees of Dartmouth College with a proposal to establish a medical school there, and after a couple of years of waiting, during which time Nathan went to Scotland and London adding to his own medical education, the trustees approved the Medical School.
                Nathan had an attitude toward the practice of medicine that differed from that of other learned doctors of his day.  He taught his students to carefully examine their patients and pay particular attention to what they were experiencing. He believed that good nursing care was very important in the treatment of a sick person, and that the wise physician takes advantage of every avenue of treatment while being careful to watch for side effects.  During this time, medical knowledge was rudimentary at best, and there were many treatments commonly used on patients that were useless, and some that even harmed them and made them less likely to recover.  Nathan believed that “watchful waiting” was often the best course of action.  Other doctors commonly practiced “heroic measures” like bleeding and purging.  Before the medical school was established, Nathan had dealt with an outbreak of Typhus at Dartmouth College without losing a single one of his patients by opening the windows of the patients’ rooms, wrapping them in wet sheets and giving them lots of fluids.  In his biography of Nathan, Oliver Hayward, in his book “Improve, Perfect and Perpetuate” states that he believes that Nathan’s isolation on the frontier may have saved him from engaging some of the practices popular with more established doctors elsewhere.  Harvard Medical School had more than one doctor on the faculty, and these doctors had been established as medical eminences for a long time. They hesitated to stray from the accepted teachings and medical beliefs.  Nathan was younger, in charge pretty much in a vacuum, and had been practicing medicine in the howling wilderness where necessity was often the mother of invention.
                While Nathan was in Europe, he attended many classes and lectures that featured dissection of bodies.  These experiences made him committed to dissection of real human subjects and laboratory chemistry experiments as part of the education at Dartmouth Medical School.  The problem was, that dissection of human bodies was illegal in America at this time, and because of this, bodies were hard to come by.  It was especially difficult to obtain cadavers in rural New Hampshire and Vermont. In cities, medical schools often used the unclaimed bodies of paupers, or prisoners who had died in jail. There were more cemeteries in cities, and the cemeteries were much bigger, and a disturbed grave would not be noticed as quickly than it would be in the rural Upper Valley, where everyone noticed everything.  If a body was dug up in Hanover, everyone in the whole town would know about it immediately. 
                If a person was caught and convicted of graverobbing, they would receive a $2000 fine, 2 years in prison and 50 lashes.  There are multiple indications that graverobbing was rampant in the Upper Valley at this time.  Norwich cemetaries were a prime spot for grave robbers, and in the early town reports in Cornish there is documentation of the “problem of grave robbing” being discussed at town meeting, and stern warnings given by town officials toward potential grave robbers. Of course one wonders if Nathan Smith was behind the grave robberies in Cornish and whether or not his Chase relatives knew.
                In 1804, the Dartmouth Trustees voted to give Nathan a raise, on the condition that he would move to Hanover permanently, and bring his family with him.  Before this, Nathan had been maintaining two households.  He rented a couple of rooms in Hanover, but Sally and his sons remained behind in Cornish.  One assumes that the Trustees thought that Nathan was spread too thin, and he would do a better job if he could live with his family at Dartmouth.  The question is, was it financial considerations that kept the family in Cornish, or Sally’s disinclination to move to Hanover?  The family was living right across the road from her parents, in a house that her father owned.  With Nathan being so busy teaching medical school and carrying on his medical practice, she probably preferred to stay by her parents and siblings.  After Jonathan died in 1801, she may have been more amenable to a move to Hanover that she would have been before he died.  By all accounts, Jonathan was very close to his children and his grandchildren, in a way that Nathan may very well not have been.

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Windsor County Court September 2


Nathaniel Watkins, DOB 11/29/86, pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Chester on August 24

Michelle Cronin, DOB 9/13/74, pled guilty to a charge of unlawful trespass in Springfield on May 26

Paul Smith, DOB 8/17/90, pled guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Sharon on August 24

Willie Cook, DOB 8/4/64, pled not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Harford on July 6

Michael DePalma, DOB 7/22/59, pled not guilty to a charge of negligent operation of a motor vehicle on July 10 in Windsor

Jacob Cardente, DOB 9/18/90, pled not guilty to charges of his first DUI, and leaving the scene of an accident with property damage on August 3 in West Windsor

Steven McDermott, DOB 3/30/95, pled not guilty to his first DUI in Hartford on August 26

Windsor County Crime Online

 

Joshua Crowson, age 23, of Springfield:

 

Michael Gray, age 21, of Pomfret; Hannah Potter, age 20, of Barnard:

 

Hannah Potter, age 20, of Barnard:

 

Jordan Rogers, age 21, of Sharon: