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The Strange Case of Dr. Couney

Page 26

by Dawn Raffel


  sterilization, involuntary, 157

  Stevens, Burton Douglas, 117

  Stratton, Edward, 170

  stresses on pregnant women, 171

  survival rates for preemies, 66, 97, 100–05, 215

  syphilis, 163–64

  Tarnier, Étienne, 26–29, 34, 40

  technology, ethical implications of, 36–37, 67–68, 177

  thermosiphon boiler, 29

  Thompson, Frederic, 69–70, 82–84, 85–86, 122, 148

  Tilyou, George C., 56, 84–86, 165–66

  Tilyou, George C., III, 120, 166

  Toolan, Thomas, 169–70

  Topsy (elephant), 82–83, 86, 244n82

  Trans-Mississippi Exposition (Omaha World’s Fair), 15–16, 47, 55, 56, 56–59, 66, 69, 70, 96, 114, 201, 202

  Travis, Hattie McCall, 98

  Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, 122

  Trip to the Moon, A (concession), 70, 82, 84, 85, 86

  Twentieth Century (train), 187

  twentieth-century America, 61, 171, 176–77

  “Typhoid Mary” (Mary Mallon), 149

  Umbarger, Jane, 78–80

  Virchow, Rudolf, 44

  vision

  oxygen as cause of blindness, 21, 212, 217–18

  retrolental fibroplasia, 21, 217–18

  Waddell, George, 232n10

  Wärmewanne, 27–29

  Watts, Mary, 123

  “weakling” vs. “preemie,” 163

  wet nurses, 13, 17, 41, 42, 63, 65, 105, 123, 124, 164, 167, 200, 213

  White City (Chicago), 114, 117

  Whitefield, Julia, 238n44, 252n136

  Williams, Betty Lou, 183, 184, 259n183

  wills, 109–11, 149–50

  Winter, Anna, 128

  Winter, May, 9, 19, 186

  Woman’s Home Companion, 132–33

  World of Tomorrow (New York World’s Fair)

  Amusement Zone, 198–99

  diploma from Baby Incubators Institution, 9

  Dream of Venus water show, 198

  exhibits, 197–98, 202

  expectations, 197

  financial difficulties, 209, 213–14, 215

  fire prevention strategies, 201

  preemie reunion, 214

  World War I, 155

  X-ray machine, 72

  Zahorsky, John, 104–6

  ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

  ILLUSTRATION CREDITS

  1, 2: From The Official Pictures of a Century of Progress Exposition Chicago 1933 (Chicago: Reuben H. Donnelley Corporation, 1933), p. 95. Image courtesy University of Illinois at Chicago Library, Special Collections

  3, 4, 5: Courtesy Carol Heinisch

  6, 7, 8, 9: Collection of the author (9 taken at the American Academy of Pediatrics)

  10, 11, 12, 13: Courtesy Katherine (Ashe) Meyer

  14, 15: From Harry H. Laughlin, “The Eugenics Exhibit at Chicago: A Description of the Wall-Panel Survey of Eugenics Exhibited in the Hall of Science, Century of Progress Exposition, Chicago 1933–34,” The Journal of Heredity 26, no. 4 (April 1935), pp. 156, 158; reprinted by permission of Oxford University Press

  16: From The Illustrated London News

  17, 18, 19, 20: Courtesy Dr. Lawrence Gartner

  21: Photograph by George Newnes Ltd. From James Walter Smith, “Baby Incubators,” The Strand Magazine 12 (July–December 1896), p. 770

  22, 23, 24: From The Pan-American Exposition, illustrated by C. D. Arnold (Buffalo, 1901)

  25: Poster produced by Bockmann Engraving Company, ca. 1932

  26: Omaha Public Library

  27 (Aerial photograph of Coney Island, 1903), 138 (Martin Couney’s nurses, New York World’s Fair), 203 (Martin and Hildegarde Couney, New York World’s Fair), 214 (Baby reunion [New York], 1940): Frederick Fried Coney Island Collection, Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Columbia University in the City of New York

  28, 29, 30: Courtesy Beth Allen

  31: Missouri History Museum, St. Louis

  32: Photograph by Koehne. Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library

  33: From advertising poster for The Black Stork, ca. 1917

  34: © 2017 Ripley Entertainment Inc.

  35: Courtesy Emanuel Sanfilippo

  36: Newborn Medicine History Collection, Pediatric History Center, American Academy of Pediatrics

  37: Wurts Bros. (New York, N.Y.) / Museum of the City of New York. X2010.7.1.14272

  38: Arnold Gesell, in collaboration with Catherine S. Amatruda, The Embryology of Behavior: The Beginnings of the Human Mind (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1945), p. 203

  39: Photograph © Eric Alexander

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Dawn Raffel is a journalist, memoirist, novelist, and short story writer whose work has been widely anthologized. A longtime magazine editor, she helped launch O, The Oprah Magazine and served for many years as executive articles editor. She has also taught creative writing in the MFA program at Columbia University; at Summer Literary Seminars in St. Petersburg, Russia; Montreal; and Vilnius, Lithuania; and at the Center for Fiction in New York. She now works as an independent editor and book reviewer.

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  *Although it was never proven, rumors flew that nearby business owners had illegally siphoned water to protect their assets.

  *Once in a while, the organizers held a separate contest for African American babies.

  *There is no record of a major exposition in Berlin in 1898 or 1899.

  *A coroner’s report would cite “dilation of the heart.” Fischel had also suffered from stomachaches for months, but his death remains puzzling.

  *This calculation was probably off by a few years.

  *Both Lawrence Gartner and I wondered whether he was involved in some kind of intelligence work. A half-dozen Freedom of Information Act requests turned up nothing, nor did an investigation by a Washington, D.C., researcher who specializes in these matters. Maybe he was simply a wealthy, well-connected, fluent, crafty widower traveling frequently to France before the war. Or not.

  *Now Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, the firm later designed the John Hancock Center and the Sears (currently Willis) Tower in Chicago, and in this century, the “Freedom Tower” in New York City.

 

 

 


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