George Bodington

George Bodington in 1830

George Bodington (1799–1882) was an English general practitioner and specialist in pulmonary consumption (tuberculosis). In 1840 he published an essay, On the Treatment and Cure of Pulmonary Consumption, condemning contemporary treatments and advocating instead dry frosty air, gentle exercise, and a healthy diet. Discouraged by vehement attacks made by reviewers, he changed his interests to the treatment of insanity.

Introduction

Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the worst of all diseases to have afflicted humanity. At least 20% of the English population died after contracting TB in the early Nineteenth century. Very few sufferers expected anything but a hopeless decline. Although the disease was known from prehistoric times, the accepted medical treatments, developed over many hundreds of years, were harsh, unpleasant and rarely successful. They also weakened the bodily strength needed to resist its advances.[1]

George Bodington's international reputation as a physician is based upon his pioneering treatment of patients suffering from TB (Pulmonary Consumption), described his classic Essay written in 1840. It is unfortunate that medical historians have largely ignored other very significant aspects of his life and work. Typical is a comment by Richard Cyriax, who was a TB Treatment Officer in Warwick and Coventry In a very well researched and informative article about Bodington's treatment of TB, Cyriax ended with the comment that "little needs to be said of the remainder of Bodington's life after 1840." (2)

This statement was quite wrong, but it reflects a commonly held view that Bodington's later career does not merit investigation. Even his 1882 Obituary gives only a passing reference to his long career caring for mentally ill patients. (3) For thirty years, Bodington worked with compassion and ingenuity, treating patients in his Driffold House Lunatic Asylum. This was a period in history when few physicians had the knowledge or the inclination to specialise in treating mental illness and when there were frequent allegations of profiteering and abuse among owners and managers of asylums.

Bodington should also be recognised for his energy and commitment to public service. For more than thirty years, during a time of intense social, economic and political change, he found time to serve as a magistrate and as a leading member of Sutton Coldfield's historic governing body, the Warden and Society.

Early Life and Education

George Bodington was born at Calverton, Buckinghamshire in 1799. He came from a large family, closely related to the Warwickshire Bodingtons, who owned considerable landed estates near Kenilworth. (4) He was the seventh of his parents' eleven children. This possibly explains his decision to take up a profession, rather than competing to manage the family's rural estates (An older brother also became a GP). Bodington was sent to Magdalen College School, Oxford, one of England's oldest public schools, dating from 1448. He was almost certainly one of the College's "pay boys" and not one of the 16 choristers whose education was wholly funded by the School's foundation. By coincidence, this was also the School which educated John Harman (Bishop Vesey) who was Sutton Coldfield's greatest benefactor in Tudor times). English public schools were in a general decline at this time, prior to widespread reform later in the Century. There is evidence of some very harsh discipline, as well as occasional violent conflict between the School's pupils and local youths in Oxford. (5) (None of this seems to have affected Bodington, whose successful career, public service and advanced literary skills indicate that he must have received a very effective education.)

In the early 1800s, it was common for aspiring physicians to arrange their own training, usually by seeking practical work experience. They had to work this way because there few structured medical training opportunities. Trainee physicians basically learned by observing and assisting those already in practice. Bodington was first apprenticed at the age of seventeen to Mr Syer, a surgeon in Atherstone, Warwickshire and later to Mr Wheelwright, a City of London surgeon.

Bodington's search medical training led him to St Bartholomew's Hospital, London, which was not at that time a recognised medical school and did not grant formal qualifications. Like other would-be physicians, Bodington would have paid doctors for allowing him to "walk the wards," observing them at work and taking opportunities to give practical assistance. Contemporaries wrote of some "casual, episodic and uneven teaching" at St Bartholomew's, often consisting only of "written compositions, read to students" in crowded halls.

These "trainee physicians" did not generally receive enough practical bedside experiences or the necessary degree of structured preparation to meet the demands of general medical practice. (6) However, the evidence of Bodington's later career suggests that he possessed the motivation, intelligence and curiosity to rise above these serious flaws in medical training. Throughout his career, he showed high degrees of advanced and original thinking, and, according to testimonials from other physicians and the evidence of his own writings, seems to have given individual, competent and thoughtful care to his patients.(6)

Bodington gained only one professional qualification before commencing his career in general practice. He was awarded the Licentiate of the College of Apothecaries in 1825. At that time, the numbers of unqualified people practising as physicians causing concern to the government. It thus gave the College powers to "regulate the practice of apothecaries." It was necessary for physicians to have this minimum qualification since they frequently had to prepare as well as prescribe medicines for their patients. Bodington's certificate declared that he "had been by us carefully and deliberately examined as to his skills and abilities in the Science and Practice of Medicine and as to his fitness and qualification to practise as an Apothecary."

He did not obtain his medical doctorate (MD) until 1843 (see below), and was not awarded the Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians (Edinburgh) until 1859, at 60 years of age. (7)

General Practice and Treatment of Tuberculosis

By 1827, Bodington had established a general practice in Hillaries Road, Erdington and married Ann Fowler, who came from a prosperous local family. The couple set up home nearby at 165 Gravelly Hill. Their first child, George Fowler Bodington, was born in 1829. (8)

Even at this early stage in his career, Bodington was keen to publish his views in national medical journals, writing frequently, for example, to the Lancet. He consistently argued that traditional and conventional ways of treating diseases frequently harmed, rather than cured, the patient, because they were too harsh. During an Asiatic cholera epidemic in 1831, he noted that sufferers were being regularly bled with leeches and given medicines based on mercury (calomel.. Bodington insisted that they needed to have their resistance strengthened rather than being weakened by the consequent draining of their bodily fluids. By 1839, he was making the same point about scarlatina. He wrote to Lancet claiming to have successfully treated five patients with stimulants and pain relief ("mild anodynes"), instead of what he graphically described as "scouring out" and mercury-based potions. (9)

In 1840, George Bodington published his medical Essay, "Bodington on the Treatment and Cure of Pulmonary Consumption." (10) In later years, this document has been recognised as a classic text in the history of medicine. It described a quite different way of treating patients with TB. Bodington administered a wholesome diet, exercise and a healthy environment (later known as the "fresh air", or "sanatorium" methods). Bodington also laid out his ideas for specialist treatment centres, which were closely similar to practices that were routine fifty years later and on to the middle years of the Twentieth Century.

Despite the praise given by later generations of physicians, the reaction of the medical world to the Essay was overwhelmingly unfavourable and often scathing. Lancet wrote about Bodington's "very crude ideas and unsupported assertions" and said his suggestions were "far above the range of our limited powers of comprehension." The reviewer was "at a loss to conceive upon what hitherto unobserved facts Mr Bodington has built up his castle." (11) His relatively unknown and provincial status as a "country physician" also went against him. He was openly condemning long-accepted treatments that were being used by the most eminent and respected physicians of his day. These included the young Queen Victoria's own physician, Sir James Clark who took a special interest in TB treatment. One of his patients was the poet Keats, who unfortunately died from TB. (12)

Bodington's Essay was a very bold and confident document. He virtually dismissed any discussion of the "causes, origins and nature" of TB, feeling that these were either fully known or not relevant to treatment. His overriding interest was treating the patient's symptoms by "natural, rational and successful methods." (13) Bodington pointed out that "one fifth of the deaths annually in England are from consumption, whilst cures are scarcely ever heard of, and never expected." (14)

He condemned almost all treatment strategies in common use, declaring that these often gave the opposite result to what was intended. Digitalis (extracted from dried foxglove leaves) did not, despite medical claims, regulate the heart and arteries. It was also harmful to use leeches to draw blood, and to administer drugs like calomel and tartarised antimony. These contained mercury and were used either as emetics or to "purge and revitalise the bowels," since conventional medicine emphasised the need to remove "impurities" from the body. Bodington called these treatments "helpless and meagre." (15)

Bodington's criticisms echo those made by Dr James Hamilton, a Scottish physician interested in treating TB. Hamilton wrote in 1819 that the "use and abuse of mercurial medicine" was causing "an upsurge in numbers of deaths from TB." (16) A recent author wrote that "purgatives and emetics, alongside enemas and bloodletting, were all highly prized means of 'purifying' the organism, to 'wash away' the 'putrid matter' within the body …" They "held an almost magical hold" over medical practice for longer than a millennium. (17)

The patient's ability to resist disease was not improved by "the sparse diet" of vegetables, rice and water often prescribed for them. Bodington attacked the physical conditions (warm, unventilated rooms) in which patients suffered and were confined. By contrast, his main aim was to build up the patient's bodily strength and thus improve the capacity to resist the "wasting disease." He wanted to stimulate appetite, preserve and restore the nervous system, and combat the contraction of lungs that were "impaired by tuberculous deposits." (18) To this end, patients should eat plenty of fresh meat, potatoes and vegetables and drink "a good sherry or Madeira" (with some wine permitted after evening dinner). After a few days, there would be "a reduction in pulse," assisted at night by taking a "sleeping sedative" (usually based upon morphine). (19)

As for the sick room, patients should "live in and breathe freely the open air ... the only gas fit for the lungs" Bodington drew upon his country background to describe how "farmers, shepherds and ploughmen are rarely liable to consumption, living in the open air." (20) The victims were usually townspeople who lived in closed rooms and smoke-filled environments. Bodington wanted to treat his patients in rural surroundings. They should sleep at night in a cool, ventilated room. In the day, they should have "free use of a pure atmosphere" and as much exercise (especially riding and walking) "as the patient's strength allowed." (21)

This open environment contrasted sharply with conventional practice, where patients with TB were confined within warm rooms without ventilation. Bodington vividly described this as "forcing them to breathe over and again the same foul air, contaminated with the diseased effluvia of their own persons." (22)

Bodington wrote that the ideal location for treating TB should be in a "dry and high" area where the cold "is never too severe." (In essence, he seems to be describing Sutton Coldfield in the 1830s.) He saw no special advantage in a coastal location. Cold air was "most powerful … for healing and closing cavities" and reducing "ulcers of the lungs." He stressed the need to "keep the surface of the body warm by sufficient clothing …" (23)

It is not known where Bodington treated patients with TB prior to 1836. In that year, he came to live at Driffold House, Maney, Sutton Coldfield, and he also purchased the private Lunatic Asylum that had been opened there in the 1790s. (24) He wrote that he had "taken for the purpose a house in every respect adapted, and near to my own residence" for the benefit of patients. (25) This was The White House at Maney Corner, Sutton Coldfield, later demolished in the 1930s to make way for a cinema and shops. Historians of TB treatment regard The White House as first known building in the world to be recognised as a sanatorium for treating patients on open-air principles. (26)

With remarkable confidence for a physician practising in 1840, Bodington asserted that he had "met with signal success, and scarcely an instance … wherein the consumptive symptoms have not gradually yielded, and the patients restored to complete health." (27) This statement was not accepted by Lancet's reviewer, who severely criticised Bodington's "limited scope of evidence." In fairness, this was a weakness in Bodington's otherwise well-argued case. He had only described the treatment of six patients suffering from TB in as many years. Lancet went on to concede (in a rather mocking tone) that Bodington's case would be proved if there was clear, verified evidence of consumption being reversed and that he would be "entitled to national rewards equal, nay, superior to those conferred on the illustrious Jenner." (28)

Bodington's Treatment of TB Patients: Case Studies

There is no evidence that Bodington treated more than six patients with TB or that his claims were externally validated. However, within thirty years, other physicians had begun to use very similar fresh air, exercise and dietary strategies. This supports the probable accuracy of Bodington's claim to have achieved success. In his Essay, Bodington used remarkably clear and powerful language to describe the treatment of four female and two male patients between 1833 and 1839. While this seems a small number, he pointed out that, most GPs had neither the time nor suitable premises to treat "their consumptive patients". (29)

The first patient was a tool maker ("awl grinder") from Erdington, several of whose relatives had died from TB. Bodington starkly described his condition. He was "fair, florid, spare and slender," had a high heart beat, feelings of suffocation, was exhausted, had no appetite, and expected a rapid death. His "frame collapsed." Bodington gave him wholesome food and a programme of exposure to the open air. He encouraged early rising, and, as the patient improved, daily walking. The patient was "a very determined man" and was soon taking a daily return walk to Welshman's Hill (New Oscott). Doses of hydrochloric morphine induced sleep, while port wine was given at repeated intervals – Bodington's remedy to reduce blood pressure. (30)

In common with some later patients, the toolmaker was not completely cured. His symptoms returned at intervals. Bodington described his need to train his patients to "know themselves" and to re-apply natural treatments. "They employ these means effectually to ward off any fresh attack." (31)

Bodington's methods seem to have been regarded with considerable suspicion in some quarters. He was not readily consulted until patients or relatives had lost all hope of recovery and had lost faith in conventional treatment. Bodington described a "young lady of about 16 years of age" who "came under my care" in 1835. She was emaciated, had a violent cough and very poor breathing. Her chest "rattled and gurgled" and she produced mucous and blood. Due to severe opposition from her family, Bodington's treatment was delayed by two months. After initial setbacks, she responded well. She began to ride a donkey, which helped build up her strength and by June 1836 she was recovering. Three years later she was "still in perfect health". (32)

Bodington does not reveal that this patient was his own niece. This was not apparently known, outside of his family, until 1902, when Dr A T Tucker Wise, who ran a sanatorium in Switzerland, was researching Bodington's treatment of TB. He was amazed to receive a letter from "Mrs E M," an 81-year-old resident of Cheltenham. She had been informed by her cousin, Dr George Fowler Bodington (eldest son of George Bodington), that Tucker wanted "to hear from me any details respecting his father's treatment of my case … when many long years ago, I was supposed to be hopelessly ill in an advanced stage of pulmonary consumption …"

"Mrs E M" told him about "the strong opposition of my dear parents and other relatives, whose prejudices were too strong to be overcome." Her description of Bodington's treatment confirms his own account, including the initial donkey ride. She ended her letter by assuring Dr Tucker Wise that "in my 81st year, I am in the possession of fairly good health … on the whole I have enjoyed remarkably good health." She also confirmed "There is no doubt that the mischief in my lung was entirely healed under the skilful treatment of my uncle." (33)

There is strong evidence for identifying the niece as Hannah Fowler, from Birches Green, Erdington, who was the daughter of William Fowler (brother of Bodington's wife, Ann). Many years later, Miss M Fowler of Streetly wrote that Bodington "practised in Erdington first, and on cousin Hannah MacKay (a Hannah Fowler), then moved to Sutton…" In 1928, A H Saxton, a local historian, wrote that Bodington's TB treatment was "ridiculed and tabooed by local doctors. They refused his repeated offers to treat his niece who lived at Birches Green, but when they had given up hope of her recovery, he so successfully treated her that she married and lived for over 70 years." The 1841 Census records Hannah Fowler aged 20, living in Birches Green with her parents, William and Hannah. Her age and details of treatment match those of "Mrs E M." (34)

Another patient's experiences enhance the credibility of Bodington's reports, and also show his caution in claiming complete and long-term success. There was a 19-year-old man, "the most difficult case I have hitherto encountered, and the most doubtful." The case was complicated by various previous illnesses. Bodington persisted with "three or four glasses of wine daily … and a good supply of fresh animal food, sedatives … early rising, and going daily out of doors or sitting for the most part with the window wide open and without a fire." The last mention of this patient indicated that the disease "still appears arrested in its progress" but the pulse rate was dangerously high. (35)

There was also "a lady from Birmingham … brought to me as a forlorn hope..." in 1836. Initially, she progressed well, also responding to donkey-riding exercise. She relapsed during an influenza epidemic early in 1837, returned for treatment and "remains tolerably well. (36)

In the last case he described, Bodington revealed that he did occasionally use leeches, but not to drain the patient's blood. He treated "Mrs L, the wife of a tradesman" who was "pale and bathed in ... perspiration." She had a bronchial abscess, an internal tumour and could hardly breathe. "8 or 10 leeches were quickly applied … her mouth became suddenly filled with matter of a purulent character, which she ejected; the breathing became free…" The leeches were clearly successful. Bodington reported that he had later met her "riding several miles from home. (37)

Recommendations for Specialist TB Treatment

After describing these cases, Bodington used his Essay to argue for unprecedented specialist facilities to treat TB patients. These proposals anticipated, with extraordinary accuracy, many of the developments that became standard practice in the later years of the Nineteenth Century and beyond. He recommended specialist treatment of TB by "a certain class of practitioners who should exclusively pursue this practice as a distinct branch." (38)

These physicians would work in dedicated, specialist TB hospitals (very similar to the later "sanatoria"). "The common hospital in a large town is the most unfit place imaginable for consumptive patients." (39) He proposed that these hospitals should be sited in rural, inland locations, with "airy and dry" conditions. Bedrooms should be kept cool and ventilated. There should be ample provision for exercise (carriage, horse, donkey, walking). The premises should be regularly inspected by people "unbiased by former medical practice …" He condemned the poor quality of urban environments in the 1830s, where there was extreme industrial pollution. Patients who recovered should not return to their former, polluted neighbourhoods. He suggested that these people should work in open-air jobs, for example, on farms or gardening". (40)

At the conclusion of his Essay, Bodington gave a resounding pledge:

"For my own part, from a decided conviction of the benefit to be derived, I shall continue, if I have opportunity…to receive patients into my house … (41)

He was also a local politician and served on the Sutton Coldfield Corporation for forty years (having as usual being appointed for life).

Rejection

The pledge was very soon to be broken. Copies of Bodington's Essay were widely distributed to medical publications. With few exceptions, his ideas were rejected, often with scorn. As previously noted, Lancet led the way, quoting large sections of the Essay in order to mock its content. Mr Bodington's theory of consumption is altogether novel, and far above the range of our limited powers of comprehension. (42) The British and Foreign Medical Review, the leading medical journal of its time, said Bodington had "betrayed utter ignorance of pathology, therapeutics and the English language" and accused him of writing an "elaborate advertisement of his establishment for tuberculosis patients" (43)

It is hard in the modern age to credit the hostility that Bodington received for proposing what later became the accepted treatment for TB. (Lancet's review may have shaken him even more than other comments because a young, radical surgeon, Thomas Wakley, had founded that journal. As a reforming Member of Parliament, Wakley devoted his life to attacking established views and promoting medical and social improvements.)

In attempting to understand Bodington's critics, we cannot ignore his own status. He was relatively young and did not have a higher medical qualification at this time. In the 1830s, Sutton Coldfield was a relatively unknown and mainly rural area with a population of less than 4,000. It was not difficult to write Bodington off as merely "a village doctor." He also seems to have worked on his own, without any known support from other medical associates. The reaction of Bodington's own family, when he wanted to treat his niece, showed the strength of hostility to his ideas, even from close relatives. He had presented his Essay without independent verification and his conclusions were based on the treatment of only six patients. Lancet was too easily able to complain that "we are ... at a loss to conceive upon what hitherto unknown facts Mr Bodington has built up his castle."(44)

Eventual Recognition

In a curious and rather paradoxical way, it can be argued that Bodington's later fame, and his honoured place in the history of medicine, was helped rather than destroyed by the publicity and even the scathing reviews. If the Essay had not been published and so widely reviewed, the details of his discoveries and successful treatments would probably have been ignored and forgotten. By the mid 1850s, when others were beginning to develop fresh air treatment strategies (probably independently). In Germany, Herman Brehmer was pioneering sanatorium treatments, as was Dr Edward Trudeau at Saranac Lake, New York in the 1890s. Both men operated on recognisably the same principles as Bodington. In the late 1850s, Bodington's Essay was rediscovered and republished. (45) When later years, Robert Koch, a German microbiologist claimed to have pioneered the "sanatorium" method of treating TB, Bodington's friends destroyed his claims by sending a copy of his Essay to The Times newspaper. (46)

The quality of Bodington's Essay had been recognised in Bavaria in as early as 1843. In that year, he wrote to the University of Erlangen, stating that "after a period of eighteen years, I am now desirous to take a degree in Medicine … I am also the author of a treatise on the treatment and cure of Pulmonary Consumption, also of various papers on general subjects in some of our medical publications …" He attached the Essay as a Thesis to support the application. He also enclosed a number of complimentary testimonials, which showed that some colleagues in the West Midlands held him in very high esteem. For example, J D Hodgson, Surgeon to Birmingham General Hospital wrote that he was "a man of unexceptionable moral character and great professional attainments" and J T Ingleby MD, FRCP wrote that Bodington was "an observing and discreet practitioner… most fully qualified to discharge the difficult duties of his calling … to the satisfaction of the sick and afflicted". (47)

As a result, and subject to a fee of £20, payable through "the Banking House of Mr Rothschild in London," the University of Erlangen awarded Bodington his Doctorate of Medicine (MD) in 1843. He had not visited or studied at the University. (The current Archivist reports that this manner of gaining awards was unusual, and mainly confined to English physicians during that period.)

It was not until the middle of the 1850s that medical journals in England began to rediscover Bodington's Essay, and showed a belated generosity by admitting that his ideas were soundly based. The Journal of Public Health in 1857 was the first to publish a very positive analysis of his TB treatment. It may also be no coincidence that this was also the year when Bodington was awarded the Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians (LRCP) by Edinburgh University.

In 1865, the British Medical Journal, responding to a letter from Bodington, finally reversed the damage done by the scathing reviews of 1840: "Dr Bodington's Treatise … is a most sensible and practical essay. The rational principles of the treatment of the disease, which are accepted as orthodox at the present moment, will be found there, laid down in it twenty years ago." (48)

By 1902, Dr A T Tucker Wise, wrote a well-publicised article in the British Medical Journal, which did much to confirm Bodington's place in history as an outstanding early pioneer of TB treatment. Tucker Wise wrote "nothing of importance in the routine treatment of pulmonary consumption has been added since his book appeared … he was the originator of the modern method." (49) Tucker Wise also noted that the only noticeable change (perhaps not a surprise!) was that Bodington's "liberal use of alcohol" was no longer part of the treatment process.

Bodington's Motives for Ceasing to Treat TB Patients

Why did George Bodington decide to abandon his treatment of TB patients after 1843? Not only did he give up his "White House" sanatorium, he also largely withdrew from general medical practice. (50) In later life, he did express regret, but gave no reasons. He wrote in 1866 to his son, Dr George Fowler Bodington:

The confidence and certainty expressed in his Essay indicate that Bodington had expected the medical world to recognise both his advances in treating TB, and his detailed proposals for specialist facilities to combat and treat the disease. Possibly, he could not cope with further damage to his reputation among patients and medical colleagues through his apparent use of unorthodox methods. These laid him open to allegations of being a "quack doctor." Perhaps he could no longer attract enough patients to sustain the running costs to keep "The White House" sanatorium open.

On the positive side, Bodington was increasingly busy in other directions. Since 1836, he had been proprietor and medical superintendent of his Driffold House Lunatic Asylum. This had become a demanding responsibility in the years before he stopped treating TB patients. Bodington devoted much of the remainder of his professional life treating mentally ill patients at the Asylum. (52) In this connection, he was required to apply to Sutton Coldfield's Corporation (Warden and Society) for an annual licence to practice in this way. He could not afford loss of reputation in these circumstances. Bodington was also a man of strong political views and civic ambitions. He cherished a dream (never achieved) to become an MP but even in those times, a respectable public image was desirable. (53)

Subsequent Medical Career

There are some indications that Bodington did continue to treat some patients after 1843, but in a private capacity and not on an organised basis, except to perform his very demanding mental health role at Driffold House. In her diary, Sarah Holbeche mentions Bodington being present in 1865 at "the removal of Mr Addenbrooke's tumour."(54) Richard Holbeche, born in 1851, wrote somewhat drily about "Dr Bodington, who brought me into the world and frequently reminded me of it, once at a public dinner." (55)

He continued to submit numerous articles to medical journals well into the 1860s, showing a particularly strong interest in the treatment of cholera. During the severe cholera outbreak in 1853, Bodington wrote to Lancet recommending treatment by using diluted sulphuric acid together with compounds of ether and laudanum. He characteristically wanted to provide "great a circulation of pure air" to revive the patient's resistance.

Bodington was interested in broader public health issues, some of which he supported as a member of Sutton Coldfield's Corporation (Warden and Society). In contrast to other polluted cities (for example, "the cellars and close working places" of the Lancashire towns), Bodington surprisingly praised the Birmingham region's healthy environment. He suggested that there was a comparative local immunity from Asiatic cholera and other epidemic diseases, due to Birmingham's "elevated situation," and its efficient sewage disposal arrangements. He also thought that local chemical works helped by giving off sulphuric acid fumes, claiming that the "constant infusion of mineral gases" minimised the harmful spread of "epidemic poisons." But he did also warn that good health in Birmingham was being threatened because its "celebrated ale" was being "eclipsed with unhappy success by the opening of gin palaces." (56)

Chapter Two: Driffold House Asylum

Since the late 1850s, there has been regular interest in Bodington's pioneering strategies for treating patients with TB. This work, although vastly significant, took place within a short period of his career and has overshadowed his other important achievements. In particular, his thirty years as proprietor and medical superintendent of the Driffold House Lunatic Asylum, Sutton Coldfield has often been ignored, or dismissed with a brief comment by subsequent writers. Bodington's role in treating many patients with mental illness is not mentioned on the memorial plaque erected in June 1953 by Sutton Coldfield Borough Council, in Bodington Gardens on the corner of The Driffold and the Birmingham Road. Even the well-publicised Obituary of Bodington's life (1882), contains only a passing reference to his mental health career. Perhaps these omissions reflect past and changing attitudes towards mental illness and also the difficulties of locating sufficient evidence about the major preoccupation of Bodington's working career, which spanned 30 years.

There are a number of sources that help to develop a picture of Bodington's contribution to the care of mentally ill patients, at a time when there was limited expertise in this area of treatment. These sources include Census information between 1841 and 1871, Bodington's letters and articles in medical journals, reports from the national Commission in Lunacy, minutes of Sutton Coldfield's local governing Corporation (Warden and Society) and references in a published works, local diaries and estate plans. Within limitations, it is possible to build up a broad, if patchy, view of the quality and type of provision (medical, physical and social) for some of the people residing at Driffold House in the middle years of the Nineteenth Century.

Bodington's interest in mental illness (still almost universally called "lunacy" or "madness" during most of the Nineteenth Century) developed when this was gradually becoming a recognised medical discipline. From the later years of the Eighteenth Century, coinciding somewhat with public concern over the so-called "madness of King George III," the concept of mental illness was gradually displacing centuries of ignorance about "moon mad" lunatics and possession by evil spirits. Governments were starting to intervene, for example, initially to require that only a recognised physician could certify insanity. Another reform in 1828 required asylums to be licensed, and annually inspected by magistrates on behalf of local government bodies. Localities also had to provide free asylum places for those unable to pay fees (known as "pauper lunatics") who were otherwise being placed in workhouses. The Commission in Lunacy was set up in 1845 to regulate and inspect public and private asylums. The Commissioners arranged inspections of asylums, publishing informative annual reports and clear guidance that had a huge influence on the evolution of improved mental health treatment.

In 1836, George Bodington purchased the Driffold House Lunatic Asylum in Sutton Coldfield, from Richard Horton and William Terry (both described as "surgeons" in the 1830 Directory of Sutton Coldfield's inhabitants). The Asylum had been opened in 1793 and for some time it was the only private "madhouse" in Warwickshire. It was licensed for the reception of Insane persons, 25 in number, male and female, whereof 5 to be parish pauper patients. (1) As well as providing accommodation and facilities for patients, Driffold House made a spacious and comfortable home for Bodington's growing family.

It is not clear why Bodington became interested in mental health treatment. For several years he managed to run the Asylum at the same time as attending to his general practice and treating TB patients. It probably stretches coincidence to suggest a connection with the Dean of Erlangen University's Medical School. This was Johan Michael Leupold, who presented Bodington's MD certificate in 1843 and also possessed a signed a copy of his Essay. Leupoldt was one of the most eminent early pioneers of mental health treatment and gained international fame for his work in opening the first hospital for mentally ill patients in Bavaria. Is it credible to speculate about possible links with Bodington, whose own writings rarely gave any clues as to the sources of his ideas and practices?

Driffold House: A Small, Privately Owned Asylum

When Bodington moved into Driffold House, he took on the joint roles of asylum proprietor and resident medical superintendent. This contrasted with the position in many private asylums, where absentee owners would employ staff to live on site and take full day-to-day responsibility. This practice was condemned by Lord Ashley, one of the great reformers of the Victorian age who called "the whole system of private asylums…. abominable and indefensible." Others spoke of the "struggle between principle and self interest." (2) With his characteristic vigour and clear language, Bodington entered the "private versus public" debate, promoting Driffold House as an example of good practice among small privately owned asylums. He described the large public asylums as "formal, cold, forbidding … too much in the barrack style" and complained of "evil mingling pell-mell together under one roof … masses of lunatics who are often ... injurious to one another." (3)

Bodington praised smaller asylums. He described a kindly ethos in these institutions, which promoted personal and caring regimes. He said that he admitted "a patient as a visitor, or a friend, and practising on him the praiseworthy deceit that he is come to take up a temporary abode …" He also described caring for the insane as "the most arduous and frequently unthankful office of managing, soothing and controlling the deranged mind." (4)

To illustrate his arguments against the large public asylums, Bodington described the experiences of some patients who had been removed from these and transferred to Driffold House. Some of these patients had recovered under his care. In 1838, he had admitted a 30-year-old gentleman from a large asylum. He had been "frequently witness of detestable crimes … wholly at the mercy of keepers who were chosen for their strength and size"…. (and) … "abused the authority reposed in them." (5) He also referred to an "idiotic" patient who had been removed from a county asylum after being fastened to a bed in a straitjacket. A 59- year- old lady had "experienced horrors" in an asylum that seemed to be "a place of punishment." She had been successfully treated at Driffold House and had become "a sincerely attached friend to the female part of my family." Another former patient was the "wife of a medical practitioner of considerable eminence … (who) ... recovered …(and later) ... visited with handsome presents for all my children (and had) warmest feelings of gratitude to those ladies in this establishment who had watched over her and consoled..." (6)

These and other writings give a picture of Bodington as a physician of considerable humanity, dedication and expertise, who came to view his patients as part of a family-based community that was devoted to their care and possible recovery. Nevertheless, Bodington continued to attract severe criticism. Another correspondent, under the pseudonym of "Looker On," sharply attacked him for his "temper, style and habits" in arguing his case. Dr James Hitch MD, resident physician at Gloucester County Asylum wrote to "object in principle to controversial correspondence on medical subjects" and said that Bodington had lost his argument by using extreme and vigorous language. (7)

Bodington's defence of smaller licensed houses tended to overlook the malpractices and scandals that were reported in more than a few asylums. As late as 1854, the Commission in Lunacy reported that "medical attendants of many ... smaller licensed houses are non-resident (and) visit them only periodically." It outlined further reports of abuse. As examples, the Commissioners described the use of solitary confinement, forced feeding, whips and manacles, and sundry other methods of intimidation. (8) These abuses had continued on a wide scale, despite the introduction of annual inspection of Asylums and "Madhouses."

Inspection and Licensing

As required by law, Sutton Coldfield's Warden and Society arranged annual inspections at Driffold House. Their Minutes record annual applications from George Bodington (and his predecessors) for the renewal of their Licence to operate the Asylum. For example, the Licence in 1844 recorded

                                         "…at these sessions, George Bodington of The Driffold … aforesaid Surgeon is licensed

to keep a house within the Royal Town, Manor and Lordship of Sutton Coldfield and within the jurisdiction of this Parish for the reception of 12 male and 8 females, the whole to be private patients, and the males to be kept in a part of the building having no

                                         internal communication with that part in which the females are kept … and in which house  	
                                         George Bodington now resides." (9)

Until 1844, it had been a requirement that Driffold House Asylum should admit up to five parish paupers. From that time, publicly funded places were becoming available for these unfortunate people in the county asylums.

Three Justices of the Peace (JPs) were appointed annually as visitors to the Asylum. They were accompanied by Sutton Coldfield's Deputy Steward and Clerk of the Peace (Vincent Holbeche in 1844). They presented annual reports of their findings. Unfortunately, it has not yet been possible to trace these. Nationally, it was noted that there were frequent contradictions between the reports of the local visitors (who generally knew and were sympathetic to the owners) and those of national inspectors sent by the Commissioners in Lunacy (who were generally rigorous and independent.) (10)

Until 1861, there was little control over the qualifications of people running asylums. In that year, the Lunacy Commissioners brought in a ruling that licenses would only be granted to "medical men or persons with high character and repute."

                                                                                          Some Classifications of Insanity in the 1840s
                                                  In 1844, the Metro Lunacy Commissioners drew up categories of mental illness, these being:

Mania Dementia Melancholia Monomania Moral Insanity Idiocy Congenital Imbecility General Paralysis of the Insane

Some categories are easily identifiable and can be translated into modern terms. Several would not be considered today to fall within the category of mental illness. In many cases, what was thought to be insanity in Bodington's time would be considered today as treatable, or even routine medical conditions. These include symptoms of diabetes, depression, industrial poisoning, epilepsy, syphilis, alcohol abuse, and heart and kidney diseases.

Source: Catherine Arnold, writing in her book "Bedlam: London and its Mad" (2008). She also claimed that female patients were almost always treated by male physicians, who often diagnosed temporary depression or apparent signs of hysteria as "madness".

Accommodation and the Quality of Care at Driffold House

Coming from a landed background, Bodington never lost his affection for rural life and he used the pleasant surroundings of his Driffold House estate to assist in treating his patients. The 1862 Commission in Lunacy Report mentions that "the proprietor holds a farm which can be made available for the occupation of male patients" and that "the house stands on rising ground with an airy and cheerful situation." "(11)"

Driffold House (lower right in the plan) was the residential part of the Asylum complex, which included surrounding gardens and farmland. Bodington's other holdings were mainly rented from Lord Somerville and the greater part lay in an approximate rectangle between the Driffold, Wyndley Lane, Wyndley Pool and towards the boundary of the later Digby Road. (12)

The Lunacy Commissioners examined the quality of the buildings and accommodation at Driffold House Asylum in 1862. Not for the first time, they criticised the quality of the physical accommodation. They confirmed that their Reports had "in the past been favourable" and "no complaints of harshness, ill treatment or indifferent food have been made"…. "they have, however, had occasion to complain very frequently of the condition of the house, especially the male side and of the want of furniture and general neatness." They noted that the female patients had "no airing court." (13) The Report seems to show a clear contrast between Bodington, as a kind, pragmatic and caring physician, and Bodington the asylum proprietor, who could show an obstinate attitude, in spite of repeated criticism, towards improving aspects of patients' living conditions.

Census returns describe the people living in Driffold House. In 1841, Bodington was living with his wife, Ann, and their six children (aged between 3 and 12 years). Ann's sister, Elizabeth, was also there at the time. Apart from Josiah Dale (Keeper), there were six residential staff, but it is unclear which of these exclusively worked for the family, cared only for patients, or perhaps served both groups.

Bodington had declared that "no one superintendent can properly undertake the charge of more than twelve patients … I limit my asylum."(14) The 1841 Census records only four female patients and two males, with an average age of 36. However, the information is valid only for the one Census day in ten years. The Census does not help in discovering information about short-term treatment or the possibility of non-resident patients. Bodington included a table in Lancet (December 1838), analysing the treatment of 18 patients (see p18 below). (15)

In 1841, patients were named in the Census. From 1851, patients were recorded only by initials to prevent their identities from becoming generally known. One patient, recorded in 1851 with the initials MM, is probably Mary Matthews, who was named in the 1841 Census. The initials and age more or less correspond and MM continued to be recorded, with her age rising by ten years, in every Census up to 1871, when she was described as "an annuitant," denoting the means by which her payments were financed.

Richard Holbeche, a local resident who wrote a colourful and informative diary, identified one patient as "Mr Fisher," who may have been the male "FF" listed in the 1861 and 1871 Census returns. He reported that the "patients used to interest us very much. More particularly one, Mr Fisher, who wore a great tail coat covered with button and a white beaver hat." (16)

Although George Bodington had previously claimed a "cure rate" of 70%, six patients recorded in the 1861 Census had the same initials (and ages ten years older) as those recorded in 1851. In 1871, when Bodington's son (George Fowler Bodington) was proprietor, there were nine patients with the same initials, and appropriate ages, as those shown on the 1861 record. Again, it is important to stress that these statistics do not show the number of patients who may have been treated and discharged (or died) between the 10 year "benchmarks".

One patient who was certainly not cured at Driffold House Asylum subsequently attempted to murder his young wife. Bodington wrote of a man who "had been discharged from my own establishment, in which he had been treated for mania." The man's friends had removed him from the Asylum, after Bodington had "declined the responsibility." (Possibly, Bodington had formally requested his removal, since he confessed to "an opinion that he was an unsafe man.") The former patient soon afterwards married a lady who had regularly visited him at Driffold House "and knew all about his malady." Before long, he had attacked his wife in the night with a razor, "inflicting upon her many wounds." He was convicted and detained as a madman "at Her Majesty's Pleasure." (17)

In 1861 residential members of the Asylum staff are recorded. Thomas Lloyd, aged 41, was shown as Head Attendant (Male Inmates), assisted by James Overton, who was only 16 years old. Mary Price, a widow aged 41, was Matron, assisted by a Cook. There is some evidence in Bodington's various letters that his two unmarried daughters, Ellen and Mary, assisted and even befriended patients. It is possible that some local non-residential staff were employed and would not have been included in the Census returns. The residential staff members were not of local origin, being variously born in Shropshire, Warwick and Worcester. (18)

                                                                                            Extract from the 1861 Census Returns
                                                                            Patients are recorded only by initials, age and marital status

The 1871 Census records a patient aged 80, with the initials "FW." He was described as an Annuitant and Chancery Lunatic. He was almost certainly Frederick Whitmore, whose wife, Jane, had appealed in 1862 to the Court of Chancery to decide upon her husband's sanity. In December 1864, Francis Barlow, so-called "Master in Lunacy," found that Whitmore "a patient in an Asylum called Driffold House… is a person of unsound mind … not fit for the government of himself, his manors … lands, tenements, goods and chattels." (19) As a "Chancery Lunatic," Whitmore's estate was overseen by Commissioners, to safeguard the assets for his family and ensure payment of the fees for his care Family members often resorted to the Court of Chancery if someone (usually wealthy) was no longer considered to be sane and responsible.

Because Driffold House was private and fee-paying, residents had to be supported, either by their relatives or other private means. Looking beyond Bodington's tenure to the 1871 Census, descriptions of patients' "former positions" were recorded for the first time. These included nine patients with the same initials as those recorded in 1861. The list includes MM, already mentioned above. Residents' former positions included farmer's daughter, sister of a mine agent, button manufacturer, annuitant widow of a Presbyterian minister, portrait and landscape painter, Chancery lunatic with a landed estate and an annuitant who was formerly a midshipman. We do not know Bodington's scale of charges, but the costs of residential accommodation, competent staff and specialist medical care would be high. Driffold House was later described as "a prosperous asylum" in George Fowler Bodington's Obituary. (20)

An Internet search yielded the details of another named patient, although these have not been securely verified. On 24 June 1854, Thomas Parks aged 50 "drowned at Driffold Lunatic Asylum, Sutton Coldfield, while in a state of temporary insanity". (21) The report notes that the incident was reported by "Dr George Bodington, Warden and Coroner, Driffold Lunatic Asylum." Bodington was also, coincidentally, Warden of Sutton Coldfield between 1852-4, and this position included acting as the local Coroner. (Whether he actually officiated, as Coroner, in a case that involved one of his own patients, and occurring on his own property, is an interesting question.) The 1851 Census records a Thomas Parks, a farmer of the appropriate age (46), living with his family in Whitehouse Common, Sutton Coldfield.

Symptoms and Strategies for Treatment

In 1838, Bodington published evidence about 18 of his patients' symptoms, treatments and results in The Lancet.

    Condition		Male  	Female	Total		Remaining under Treatment      Died    Removed (not cured)
    Monomania		  7	            4		   11		   3 (2 curable, 1 incurable)          0	           2
    Mania		          4                1               5            4 (1 incurable)                          
    Dementia               1               1                2**                                                         2
   Totals                    12              6              18            7                                              2             2*

The table indicates that seven patients seem to have recovered successfully and that Bodington was hopeful about the recovery of another two – apparently a 50% rate of success.

In the same article, Bodington stressed the importance of healthy surroundings for the treatment of patients. They needed " … the healthiest spots in the county with thousands of acres to roam over … pursuit of game, amusements varied and untiring scenes of farming operations …" He contrasted these conditions (which matched to those at Driffold House), with those experienced by patients "incarcerated in a large urban system."

Bodington again revealed his consistent preference for mild medication. He described "Miss M" aged 30, "suffering under mania and a total incoherency of ideas … deranged for five years" who had suffered at a County Asylum from severe constipation. He made up a preparation of herbal remedies and Epsom salts as a gentle alternative to the invasive purging that she had previously experienced and her general physical and mental health improved. (23)

His patient and his pragmatic strategies were also shown in the treatment of "Mr J, a single gentleman about forty years of age, possessed of a competent fortune." Bodington drew a colourful picture of Mr J, as "boisterous, joyous and somewhat domineering ... too freely in drinking…" who enjoyed a voyage to Boulogne but was suddenly seized with mental panic. He fled home, deluded with severe mania, imagining that enemies were following and trying to poison him. "From a hale and competent man he had become thin, of a dirty, yellowish complexion, with an expression of anxiety and melancholy."

Mr J refused to eat, drink or take medication because of his delusion. Bodington devoted much time and ingenuity to gain his trust. He took him to the milking parlour on the Driffold House estate, so that Mr J could witness milk being directly drawn from a cow, free from human interference. Mr J drank this, and then ate rhubarb picked from the ground in his presence. Eventually, he trusted Bodington enough to extend his diet, regulate his digestive functions, and take some medication. He was also persuaded to take exercise, when "he was accustomed to accompany me in a long walk … a horse belonging to him was kept here … in about fifteen months he was fully recovered." (24)

There is enough evidence of the range of Bodington's treatment methods to indicate his patience, caring nature and professional expertise. He was willing to use innovative and unusual strategies, carefully matched to the individual needs of patients. He stressed the benefits of the rural environment, including walking, riding and country sports. Bodington's style of treatment closely linked the importance of developing both physical and mental health. To a significant degree, these strategies matched the methods Bodington had used when helping patients with TB to build up their resistance to disease.

The Debate about Restraint

In the middle years of the Nineteenth Century the concept of "madness" was slowly being displaced by that of "mental illness." "Medico psychology" was becoming a recognised term. The Commission in Lunacy continually emphasised the need to eradicate harsh and cruel treatment in asylums and to promote humane alternatives. In 1847, the Commission's Annual Report referred to melancholic patients being immersed in cold baths, epileptics who were subjected to harsh purgatives and those with paralysis being given shock treatment in the form of creosote and other "stimulants".

In 1854, the Commission made a survey of medical superintendents' views about the methods used to restrain difficult patients, particularly where these involved physical force that was "greater in degree, more severe in character, or longer in duration than is necessary for the security and care of a lunatic" (25)

The Commissioners had recorded the following maltreatments:

                                   Seclusion and solitary confinement
                                   Revolving chairs
                                   Force feeding
                                   Excessive degrees of restraint – whips, manacles, strait jackets, chains, straw beds, violent bathing – intimidating physique of some attendants
                                   Purgatives and other invasive "medication", including bleeding and use of opiates and emetics

These methods were mainly used to keep staffing costs down and to cope with increasing numbers of patients. One proprietor said that failure to use restraint was like a soldier "who shrinks from his duty from personal fear." (26) It was argued that restraint was a final weapon, regrettable but essential, to protect patients from suicide or self-harm. In some asylums, notably the ancient Bethlem ("Bedlam") in London, restraint was completely abolished for several years, although it was restored in the 1860s. (27)

Bodington wrote to the Commissioners, stating that he "never professed or practised out and out the system which is called and known as the non restraint mode of treatment." He described it as "like all imperfect theories … overshoots the mark and goes beyond the truth." He wrote "the instrument of restraint, properly adapted, is the most efficacious, merciful way of meeting the difficulty."

Bodington mentioned patients, who "will not keep their beds, but will be up even all through the night, and in severe weather are in danger of being frost-bitten. No personal efforts of an attendant can be effectual." He supported use of a "mild and judicious application of mechanical restraint." (28)

These comments attracted a vigorous reply from John Connolly, famous as the reforming Medical Superintendent of the large Hanwell Asylum, Middlesex, where physical restraint had been abolished. Connolly began by paying an enormous tribute to Bodington, describing him to be … "as kind and candid a person as any holding a licence for an asylum," and praised Driffold House as "a fair example of respectable asylums." Despite this praise, Connolly went on to attack Bodington's opinions in rather similar terms to those used in Lancet's review of his 1840 Essay.

Connolly noted that Driffold House Asylum only served twelve patients and that Bodington's arguments were based on "the experience of a village dispensary." He also asked why "in small asylums in country places, twelve insane patients cannot be managed without the straitjacket … (when) in a large asylum near London, 1200 patients are admitted, and there is not a straitjacket in the house." He called for private asylums to "set their homes in order … (or)… the good and the bad may be swept away together." (29)

Despite Bodington's public support of mechanical restraint as a strategy of last resort, the only known criticism of Driffold House over a thirty-year period, remains limited to some furnishing and accommodation shortcomings near to the end of Bodington's tenure and never about poor treatment of patients. (30)

In 1851, Bodington was thanked for his services by the new, but short-lived Sydenham College, which operated in St Paul's Square, Birmingham, for about ten years. Founded by physicians who were unhappy with standards of training at Birmingham General Hospital, the College promoted courses of lectures on clinical approaches to insanity between 1851 and 1866, taught by "George Bodington of Sutton Coldfield who kept an Asylum." (31)

The Plea of Insanity – The Townley Case

Toward the end of his career, Bodington showed a strong interest in one of Victorian England's most notorious murder cases. In August 1864, George Victor Townley, from Wirksworth, Derbyshire, violently killed Elizabeth Goodwin, his former fiancée. He admitted responsibility but pleaded that he was insane at the time of the murder. The case aroused great public debate in Britain and abroad. There were intensive and widely reported legal arguments about the validity of the insanity plea. Townley was eventually found guilty of the murder, but the Home Secretary, swayed by the public debate, ordered a review and commuted the sentence to life imprisonment. Bodington argued that Townley's behaviour, before committing the murder, was not that of an insane person. He wrote that Townley 'having his senses about him, prepares his weapon, forecasts the time, fixes the meeting, and, to sum up, prepares himself for the final blow, by swallowing several glasses of brandy and soda." He went on to conclude that "the madman type of murderers… never dream of the necessity of such a stimulus in aid of such a crime."

He quoted the case of his own former patient who had attempted to murder his wife (see p17 above), as a good example of "mad impulse," brought on by insanity. He also told of an occasion when he had attended "a large private asylum kept by a layman" in Birmingham. Two "maniacal patients" were placed in confinement in the room, one of them being placed in a 'restraint chair' where he was viciously and suddenly attacked." The other man had a "maniacal impulse" and broke the chair over the other's head. Bodington noted that there was no explainable motive, no hatred, and no preparation for the attack. He concluded that Townley's supposed insanity was a "convenient plea, indeed, for a criminal to set up, if he can succeed in it … the law has been flustered and frustrated..."

Bodington argued that judges should look for evidence of premeditation and preparation when considering the merits of a plea of insanity. These factors would indicate a sound, calculating mind. They should also examine the defendant's background for any history of impulsive and motiveless violence. He also rejected the growing trend to link lunacy with heredity and family background. "The blood of his great grandmother or other remote ancestry … can have but little to do with the matter." Bodington wrote at a time when Darwinist theories of inherited behaviour patterns were becoming popular. (32)

Retirement and Transfer of the Asylum

During 1866, Bodington prepared to retire. He is recorded that year as being Co-Owner of Driffold House Asylum, in partnership with his eldest son, George Fowler Bodington, who took sole responsibility in 1867. The ever-observant Sarah Holbeche noted in her diary that: "GB the younger became MD – those boys have aimed high and by their own merit have obtained much to be desired."(33) She also wrote in 1869 that "Dr Bodington bought a house, 'Rocksall', in Manor Drive." (34) This was only short stroll from the Asylum.

George Fowler Bodington was the most accomplished of Bodington's six children. He had higher qualifications and even wider medical experience than his father, and was a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons. He was described as "a man of magnificent physique and fine presence.... a hardy fame and adventurous disposition." He seems to have been somewhat restless and had travelled widely, working in a succession of medical posts. In early years, he was a ship's surgeon sailing between South Africa (Natal) and India. He later became a GP in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, where he was reputed to have hunted enthusiastically for wild game. He returned as a physician to his uncle's general practice in Kenilworth, Warwicks. Soon afterwards, he served as a GP near Middlesbrough, before returning to Sutton Coldfield and take on "the management of a prosperous asylum established by his father." He soon departed from his father's limit of twelve patients. Twenty were recorded in the 1871 Census.

While at Driffold House Asylum, George Fowler Bodington became President of the Birmingham and Midland Institute and also held office at the Birmingham Branch of the British Medical Association. He eventually relocated the Asylum to Kingswinford, Staffs, because the lease had expired. He gave up the Asylum in 1884, apparently due to his second wife's illness. "After wandering for a year or two" he emigrated to British Columbia, where he became famous for pioneering mental health provision in Vancouver. He became the Medical Superintendent of British Columbia's first Lunatic Asylum. He retired to Paris and died in 1902. (35)

He was the paternal grandfather of barrister Oliver Bodington and the great-grandfather of Nicholas Bodington.

See also

Jane Davage, The life and times of George Bodington, 1981

References

  1. "TB" is used throughout, in place of Pulmonary Consumption and Phthisis, terms used by Bodington to denote a wasting disease of the lungs. Background information from p. 43 "The Victorian Hospital" Lavinia Mitton, Shire Publications, 2000 edition.

External links

Sources

Chapter One Sources (2) George Bodington 1799-1882 by Richard J Cyriax. Published by the British Journal of Tuberculosis April 1941 Sutton Coldfield Reference Library Archives (SCRLA) (3) British Medical Journal (BMJ) George Bodington's Obituary 11.3.1882 (4) Biographical details from the following: Calverton Church Parish Register (Aylesbury Records Office); Census Returns 1851-1881; H J Jackson "Visitation of England and Wales" 1893 (5) Magdalen College School website and "Magdalen School" R S Stanier 1958 (6) Background information "Becoming a Physician: Medical Education in Britain, France, Germany and United States 1750-1945. Thomas Neville Bonner pub Johns Hopkins University Press 1995 (7) University of Erlangen Archives and BMJ Obituary op cit (8) Richard J Cyriax op cit, and also Sutton Coldfield News 20.4.1956 reporting Birmingham Civic Society plaque unveiled at 165 Gravelly Hill, Erdington. (9) Letters to the Lancet 1831-1839 (Including Shoulder Joint Dislocation 1832 Vol ii p155, Arrest of Vomiting by Creosote 30.1.1836) (10) An Essay on the Treatment and Cure of Pulmonary Consumption George Bodington pub. Longman, Orme, Brown, Green and Longmans 1840 (available to download via "Google" Library) (11) Lancet 11 July 1840 (Lancet Review) (12) Sir James Clark (1788-1870) Dictionary of National Biography (13) Bodington's Essay: Title Page (14) Bodington's Essay p7 (15) ibid p4 (16) Dr James Hamilton: Observations in the Use and Abuse of Mercury Medicines. Edinburgh 1819 (17) Book Review by Carole Rawcliffe in BMJ March 2000 (18) Bodington's Essay p9 (19) ibid p12 (20) ibid p6 (21) ibid p16 (22) ibid p3 (23) ibid p17 (24) J F W Shrewsbury's "Address to Birmingham Civic Society" 20 April 1956 Handwritten Copy in SCRLA (25) Bodington's Essay p viii (26) Prof B H Bass "George Bodington: The Sage of Sutton Coldfield" West Midlands Physicians' Association 1984 (27) Bodington's Essay p19 (28) Lancet Review op cit (Edward Jenner was the pioneer in treating smallpox, another disease responsible for vast numbers of deaths) (29) Bodington's Essay p44 (30) ibid pp 20–23 (31) ibid p44 (32) ibid p26-30 (33) A T Tucker Wise MD: The Origin of the Modern Treatment of Pulmonary Consumption "BMJ" 22 February 1902 (34) A H Saxton Bygone Erdington 1928 p102; 1841 Census: Aston, Warwicks (Birches Green); Biographical Information from Miss M Fowler of Streetly (SCRL) (35) Bodington's Essay p40 (36) Bodington's Essay pp. 30, 34 (37) ibid p41-42 (37) ibid p41-42 (38) ibid p44 (39) ibid p45 (40) ibid p54 (41) ibid p55 (42) Lancet Review op cit (43) Quoted in Canadian Medical Association Journal August 1933 p113 (44) Lancet Review op cit (45) Detail from A J Carter "A Breath of Fresh Air" in Proceedings of the Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh 1994 p400 Also website of The Centre for the History of Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School and the University of Erlangen archives: Bodington's application papers for MD degree (46) A H Saxton op cit p102 (47) University of Erlangen Archives (Bodington's application for MD award) (48) Benjamin Ward Richardson (Physician to the Royal Infirmary for Diseases of the Chest) in Journal of Public Health pub Royal College of Physicians 1856. Also BMJ op cit 28.10.1865 (49) A T Tucker Wise MD op cit (50) Bodington's Obituary op cit (51) Copy of Bodington's handwritten letter to his son 1866. SCRLA (52) J F W Shrewsbury op cit (53) Rev W K Riland-Bedford History of Sutton Coldfield 1891 p 55 (54) The Illustrated Holbeche Diary (1996) J and K Jordan (Ed) SCRLA (55) Richard Holbeche's Diary J Jordan (Ed) SCRLA (56) Various articles in The Lancet, including 1.10.1853, 15.10.1853 (Related to cholera epidemics) and 23.12.1854 (On the Salubrity of Birmingham, its Suburbs and Neighbourhood")

Chapter Two Sources (1) W and S Minutes January 1836 (2) "The Trade in Lunacy: A Study of Private Madhouses in England in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries" William Parry-Jones RKP 1972 p20 (3) Lancet 2 December 1841 (4) ibid (5) ibid (6) ibid (7) ibid 23 October 1841 (8) Commission in Lunacy: Annual Report 1854 (9) W and S Minutes January 1844 10 Parry-Jones op cit p 272 (11) Commission in Lunacy: Annual Report 1862 (12) Map held by SCRLA (13) Commission in Lunacy: Annual Report 1862 (14) Lancet 22 December 1838 (15) Lancet 22 December 1838 (16) Richard Holbeche's Diary ed J Jordan (SCLRA) p 14 (17) BMJ 7 June 1902 "The Plea of Insanity" (18) Census 1861 (19) National Archives CL11/35 (20) BMJ 7 June 1902 (21) "Descendants of George Samuel Ramsdale" www.ramsdale.org/generation2.htm (22) Lancet 22 December 1838 (23) ibid 8 December 1838 (24) ibid 8 December 1838 (25) Commission in Lunacy: Annual Report 1854 (26) Parry-Jones op cit p175 (27) Catharine Arnold "Bedlam: London and its Mad" Pocket Books 2008 p184 (28) The Asylum Journal 15 November 1853 (pub. The Association of Medical Officers of Asylums and Hospitals for the Insane) (29) ibid 15 November 1853 (30) Commission in Lunacy: Annual Report 1862 (31) Minutes of Sydenham College 1851 (BRL Special Collections) (32) BMJ 12.3.1864 "The Plea of Insanity" (33) Sarah Holbeche's Diary ed Janet Jordan 2001 (SCRLA) p109 (34) Sarah Holbeche's Diary op cit p143 (35) BMJ 7 June 1902 Obituary of George Fowler Bodington and the biographical website of the Royal College of Surgeons)

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