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Hospital Rock
By Charles Leach, M.D.
Republished with permission from the
Hog River Journal,
February/March/April
2004,
Volume 2 / Number 2. For
information on the Hog River Journal, visit
www.hogriver.org.

Patient names carved into
"Hospital Rock".
Photo: Stephanie Riefe
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Hidden
deep in the second-growth hardwood forest of Rattlesnake
Mountain is an inconspicuous flat ledge of traprock. On it are
carved 66 names of long-ago Farmington residents. This is
Farmington 's "Hospital Rock," and it marks the site of Eli Todd
and Theodore Wadsworth's smallpox inoculation hospital of the
1790s. It is a reminder of the terrible epidemics of another
day, and of the efforts of local physicians to halt their
spread.
In colonial New England villages like Farmington, smallpox
epidemics were infrequent, but the inhabitants were more
susceptible than city dwellers when outbreaks did occur. A rural
population would become immune as the result of infection, and
another outbreak would not occur until five to 20 years later,
when a critical mass of susceptible people was again present. The
larger towns and cities, on the other hand, experienced small
outbreaks of the disease with such frequency that it was almost
endemic. Their populations carried a high level of immunity and
were protected for life after a childhood infection. The grim
folk wisdom was that one's child was not one's own until it had
survived smallpox. Most children did in fact survive, and their
mortality was lower than that of adults, for whom the death rate
was 20 to 30 percent.
The Virus and the Disease
The smallpox ("variola") virus consists only of two twisted
strands of DNA. It is smaller than the smallest bacteria, and
unaffected by antibiotics. It is a member of the Orthopox virus
group, which includes several animal pox viruses. Humans have
been its only reservoir; the virus was neither carried by
insects nor did it affect animals. For this reason quarantine
was effective as a preventive measure if instituted in time.
However, because of its long incubation period, a victim could
transmit the virus before its presence was recognized,
especially since it survived for many days on the bedding and
clothes of victims. These "fomites" have been an important means
of spread. There are several strains of the virus, and
consequently the severity of the illness has varied considerably
geographically and over time.
John Adams called smallpox "The King of Terrors," and Thomas
McCaulay referred to it as "The most terrible of the ministers
of death." Gurdon Buck's 1858 medical textbook referred to it as
"the most loathsome and fatal disease known to man." The disease
was usually acquired by inhalation of respiratory droplets.
After roughly 12 days it would manifest with high fever,
headache, backache and nausea. The characteristic rash developed
over two weeks; small, deep nodules evolved into pustules in the
thickened and inflamed skin. These might be few in number, or
they might cover much of the body. The lesions would then dry
and form scabs over a two- to three-week period. The pustules
might also hemorrhage and merge into a single, malodorous mass.
Rotting sheets of skin might be shed, and stick to bedclothes.
Respiratory tract and eyes could be involved, and blindness
could result. In severe cases, the victim was physically
dehumanized and unrecognizable by loved ones. Transmission can
occur until the scabs are shed; scab-laden bedding and clothing
is infectious for days or weeks. The end result for survivors
was disfiguring and often extensive scarring, but lifelong
immunity.
Smallpox arrived in the New World with the Spanish
conquistadors in Central America in 1519. A great epidemic in
London in 1628 was exported to Massachusetts , where the disease
caused havoc from 1628 to 1631. The first terrible epidemic
among New England Indians wiped out more than 90 percent of the
tribes along the coast and in the Connecticut Valley in 1633 and
1634. Subsequent outbreaks occurred in 1638, 1648-49, 1660,
1666, 1677-78 (the worst), 1689-90, and 1702-03. Finally, during
a terrible epidemic in Boston in 1721, immunization was employed
for the first time in America .
Variolation: "Taking the Pox by
Engrafting"
Protection from smallpox could be achieved by "variolation"-voluntarily
receiving a small inoculum and sustaining localized mild
disease. This had been done in China by inhaling the dried
scabs. In Africa, the Near East and later in Europe , the
variolator deposited a small quantity of pus from the pock of a
patient with mild disease into a shallow cut in the arm or leg.
The resulting disease was usually localized, and the inoculee
only mildly ill. The patient was contagious for several weeks
and had to be isolated, as local outbreaks sometimes followed.
Mortality was 1 or 2 percent, and depended on technique and
aftercare.
In 1721, thousands were dying of the contagion in Boston .
The Puritan divine and medical scientist Cotton Mather convinced
physician Zabdiel Boylston to join him in variolating
Bostonians. Boylston was severely criticized by his colleagues,
and Mather himself was threatened and vilified, and his home was
firebombed. Their work continued however. The results of
immunization were carefully recorded, and its success was
documented through one of the earliest applications of the
scientific method to medicine. Mather and Boylston found that
protection among 247 inoculees was virtually 100 percent.
Thereafter, variolation was accepted and used in the American
colonies to one degree or another. There were two great ironies
in the story: one was that Mather, spanning from medieval to
modern thought, was both a medical innovator and an advocate of
the Salem witch trials. The other was that Mather's acquaintance
with variolation derived not only from English examples but also
from his slave, Onesimus, who told him of its use in Africa .
Further major outbreaks in New England were documented in
1730-31, 1735-40, 1750-52, 1760-61, 1764, and 1772. The
Revolutionary War years brought repeated outbreaks, especially
among the troops. It was in this setting that Eli Todd, Theodore
Wadsworth, and their contemporaries initiated the smallpox
hospitals of the 1790s.
Smallpox Immunization in the 1790s

An etching from the Anti-Vaccine
Society illustrating the fear of the new method of
vaccination with the cowpox virus introduced in 1796.
Courtesy of the Hartford
Medical Society |
Although it had been more than a decade since the last great
smallpox epidemic in America (1774-1782), for many reasons, the
early 1790s was the right time for enlightened practitioners to
offer immunization to their communities. Smallpox immunization
in the colonies had followed a pattern of years of neglect
interspersed with epidemics, which triggered urgent variolation
programs. When the disease was not stalking a community, there
was little enthusiasm for undergoing the risk and discomfort of
"taking the pox by engrafting." In addition to the 1 or 2
percent mortality rate, the live variola virus inoculum could
spread to the community. For this reason variolation was
outlawed in New England in 1761, but again permitted in 1777. In
New York and the middle colonies it was more freely practiced,
and many Yankees journeyed there to "receive the pox." From time
to time, local Connecticut governments prohibited the practice.
Town selectmen always had the say as to when and where
inoculation could be done and by whom. One Connecticut
practitioner was permitted to variolate, but made to promise
that he would pay a fine of 40 shillings for every case that
occurred secondarily in the town. Another was fined 60 dollars
for doing the procedure without permission.
The English inoculator Robert Sutton introduced safer
preparation and technique in the 1760s, and the advantages of
the "Suttonian Method" were well known in the colonies. In
consequence, more physicians offered inoculation, and more
patients accepted it. The need for isolation was better
recognized and implemented. The beginnings of more sensible and
kindlier treatment of the disease itself were on the horizon.
Patients were no longer starved before inoculation, and many had
begun to doubt the efficacy and safety of vomiting, sweats,
purges, mercurials (toxic mercury salts such as calomel), and
bleeding which had previously weakened both inoculees and those
who "took the pox in the natural way."
In the early 1790s roads were still very poor and often
impassible, but the needs of commerce required improvements. In
consequence, the era of turnpike-building began in 1792. Since
troop movements during the French and Indian War had brought
smallpox to Farmington in 1760, and probably during the
Revolution, residents knew that contagion would increase with
better highways and increased travel. Socioeconomic factors were
also at work, and the earliest signs of the industrial
revolution were evident. The famous Slater cotton mills began
operations in 1790 in Rhode Island , and were soon emulated in
Connecticut . Smallpox-susceptible farm girls and children were
packed into unsanitary workplaces and habitations. And so
greater social organization gave impetus to preventive efforts.
Physicians had begun to form state and local medical societies-
Hartford 's was founded in 1792-which led to greater exchange of
information and awareness of new therapies, preventive and
otherwise. Treatment methods were debated and improved. Often
highly motivated toward the public good, the physician-variolators
were also leaders of the new medical societies. Furthermore,
community leaders and physicians perceived the dangers of
crowding and poor sanitation. As a result, publications on
public health began to appear, and communities were ready to be
more proactive in the face of epidemic disease. It was natural
that they should turn to their most trusted physicians for
inoculation by the safer and less distressing Suttonian method.
The Two Doctors
Eli Todd (1769-1833) was the well-to-do son of a New Haven
merchant. He was a brilliant honors graduate of Yale who had
studied medicine with Dr. Ebenezer Beardsley of New Haven under
the old apprentice system. He had begun practice in Farmington
at the very young age of 21, and had gained the respect and love
of his many patients. His were gentle treatment methods in an
age of harsh remedies. His skill, kindness, and cultivation made
him the favorite practitioner of the emerging wealthy class in
the community. In 1792, when he joined with Theodore Wadsworth
to establish the "hospital" on Rattlesnake Mountain , Todd was a
hard-working 23-year-old bachelor. He had already participated
in the founding of the Hartford County and Connecticut Medical
societies and was active in the community, supporting the
temperance movement and other worthy causes. He was an excellent
musician, and a founder of the Handel Society. Membership in the
local Masonic Lodge conferred status and powerful friends. In
later years, he was a leading figure in the Conversation Club.
The crowning achievement of Todd's career was his role in 1819
in the founding of the Hartford Retreat for the Insane, of which
he was the first director.
Todd was the younger of the two Hospital Rock doctors, but
probably supplied the brain power and energy for the enterprise.
He was a man of his times-the heady first years of the Republic
when, under the influence of the Age of Reason, citizens were
ready to take action for the betterment of society. He was also
a bit of an entrepreneur: newspaper advertisements and town
records show that he offered variolation at several other
facilities and with various partners, last in 1801. Todd was
highly altruistic, but very willing to engage in a lucrative
business. Medical historian Rufus W. Mathewson commented that in
1792 "the practice of inoculation was at its height.. and a
source of great income to many.... [and] the keeping of 'pock
houses' .. was profitable."
Todd's partner in the enterprise was Theodore Wadsworth
(1753-1808), who was slightly older, and a veteran of the
Continental army. His medical training was also in the form of
an apprenticeship, though we do not know his teacher's name or
whether he had attended university. In 1792 Wadsworth was 39
years old, and the father of three children. He had practiced in
Southington since 1780. Nothing in the records suggests
Wadsworth matched the brilliance of Todd, but he had the
advantage of having practiced variolation in the army, which he
joined in 1777. His military experience had no doubt taught him
the highly contagious and lethal character of smallpox. Like
Todd, Wadsworth had an entrepreneurial streak and participated
in more than one variolation enterprise. He was also bold and
original, as illustrated by the agreement (1791) documented in
the Southington town records to "cure Mary Evans of her insanity
for fifteen dollars . in six months. otherwise to have nothing."
Ironically, Wadsworth died in the terrible spotted fever
epidemic of 1808.
The Hospital and the Rock
The hospital building stood on a stony hillside known as the
"goat pasture" on Settlement Road , the old road to New Britain
. The land on which the hospital was situated is believed to
have belonged to the Josiah Kilbourn family, and was purchased
in 1798 by Elias Brown. Both families evidently had farm
buildings near the site. However it is unknown at present
whether the hospital had been a farmhouse or outbuilding, or was
a specially built structure. It was far from both town centers,
but easily accessible for attendants and visitors with immunity.
Rattlesnake Mountain sheltered the building from north winds
that would otherwise chill the patients during the autumn
months. Our only description of the structure comes at second
hand from a patient's grandchild, who described a long narrow
building standing somewhat off the road near a spring.
Inoculations were done only from about May until October, and
there was no need for fireplaces.
Near the hospital building was a smooth sunny ledge on which
the young patients could socialize, and where they picked up
messages and packages from home. Of the hundreds who must have
stayed at the hospital in the years 1792, 1793 and 1794,
sixty-six have left us their names or initials cut into the
ledge. It is smooth, flat and slopes down away from the old
roadway. Scattered on the rock's surface in an irregular area
about 15 by 20 feet, the names are barely discernible until a
visitor dusts them with flour. Then they emerge, like a
photographic print materializing in a darkroom pan.
The old Settlement Road is now abandoned, though it can be
traced from the quarry on Route 6 several miles through the
forest to where it is interrupted by Interstate 84. Along it
innumerable fragments of traprock litter the forest floor, and
there area a few hints of stone walls. Near the road and 1,000
feet from the rock itself, there is a cellar hole lined with
mortarless rock and a long-abandoned well. These are the only
remains so far uncovered that accompany Hospital Rock with its
carved names recalling a long ago and very different time.
The Patients
When news of a new smallpox epidemic came from Boston in
1792, Farmington 's best families entrusted their children to
the charismatic Todd and to Wadsworth , his more experienced
colleague
It is estimated that hundreds of patients were inoculated and
spent their recovery at the Todd-Wadsworth Smallpox Hospital .
Fifty-two of the 66 names carved into the rock include first,
and sometimes middle, initials, and these patients can be
further identified with some confidence. Considerable
information is available for 26 of them. The known ages of the
patients ranged from 9 to 33 years. Twelve family groups appear,
and one or two parent-child pairs. The social position of the
inoculees is revealing. Nineteen were descended from original
proprietors of Farmington , and most appeared to come from homes
of at least middling wealth. There were the children of
physicians, future physicians, and future spouses of physicians.
For example, the name " Hull " appears five times and all are
descended (by various lines) from five generations of doctors.
Families of clergy, judiciary, and military officers were also
represented. For example, Mary Pitkin was the daughter of
Timothy Pitkin, the wealthy and liberal minister of the
Farmington Congregational church. Edward, Sally and William
Hooker were children of Col. Noadiah Hooker who had led his
troops to the smallpox-threatened siege of Boston in 1776. They
were descended from Hartford founder Thomas Hooker. Names such
as Cowles, Wadsworth , and Whitman abound. These youngsters were
connected by blood or marriage to an extensive network of
educated, wealthy and powerful Yankees.
The high cost of variolation limited the Hospital's
clientele. We do not know what Todd and Wadsworth charged for
variolation, but a physician in 1764 charged the equivalent of
$190 in 2001 currency, and in 1801 Todd charged a man $83 apiece
(in 2001 currency) for variolating his three daughters. Free
care was occasionally offered, but the uninoculated poor
suffered disproportionately during epidemics.
The length of stay at the smallpox hospital varied, of
course, but was generally three to four weeks. This was
approximately the length of time it took for the last scab to
shed. Patients were probably inoculated in small groups, to
avoid the risk of cross-infection. Males and females were
immunized and quarantined separately on the mountain, and while
there were no scandals, lots of visiting and socializing went
on. One young man stated that he was attracted to the hospital
because "the girls are as thick there as toads after a rain."
There were even two marriages that took place after sojourns at
Hospital Rock. One involved Dr. Wadsworth's son, Harry, who wed
Anna Mix, an inoculee, in 1807. The other marriage was of Luther
Seymour and Rebekah Curtis, whose names are carved together on
the rock, with the dates "1792" and "1794," Respectively.
Evidently Luther was immune, having been variolated in 1792, and
had gone up to visit Rebekah in 1794 while she convalesced. They
were married in Middletown in 1797, and Luther became a
respected housewright, furniture maker and town librarian in
Farmington .
Postscript
Variolation passed into history with the 1796 discovery by
English physician Edward Jenner that infection with cowpox, a
viral disease of cattle, protected milkmaids from smallpox.
Cowpox, or vaccinia, virus could be passed from person to
person, and resulted in immunity. Jenner's work was quickly
followed by widespread use of "vaccination" in England and after
1800 in the New World . The new procedure was much safer than
variolation and just as effective. Though a few physicians
continued to use variolation for a time, it was quickly
supplanted. The Todd/Wadsworth hospital was no longer needed,
and faded away into the woods.

Dr. Charles Leach, Farmington Town
Manager Kathy Eagen, and Councilman Bill Wadsworth
dusting hospital rock to facilitate reading the
200-year-old inscriptions carved in the rock.
Photo courtesy of Dr.
Charles Leach |
There were no further significant smallpox epidemics for many
years in Connecticut . Evidently because immunity waned and
vaccination was neglected for a few years, an increased number
of susceptibles provided the raw material for a new episode.
This came in 1827, when cases in Farmington alerted the town's
officials and doctors. In response, the town undertook a
thorough program of vaccination. Teams of physicians (including
Todd) vaccinated hundreds of citizens at the several district
schoolhouses. The epidemic was effectively stopped. The
carefully-kept records of this program are now in the Farmington
Room at the Town Library. Farmington again acted in response to
the threat of smallpox in 1857. On a motion by Egbert Cowles
Esq., it was voted that "the Selectmen be . directed to take
measures to have the people of the Town vaccinated by School
Districts . and use their best endeavors to have a general
attendance of the People at the District School Houses to meet
the Physicians.." In later years, vaccination was more routinely
done, and the need for revaccination was recognized. Eventually,
smallpox immunization became a requirement for admission to
school and remained so until the disease was declared eradicated
by the World Health Organization in 1980.
The last small local outbreak of smallpox occurred in 1918,
and was recalled by Farmington 's revered Dr. Edward Dunn, along
with the influenza epidemic, as his "welcome to town." The last
case in the United States was recorded in 1949, and the last
naturally occurring case in the world was recorded in Somalia in
1977. As the result of a massive years-long effort by the World
Health Organization, smallpox became the first living species to
be deliberately made "extinct" by man. (At present stocks of the
virus are held in freezers at the Centers for Disease Control
and in Moscow .) No vaccinations had been done since 1980 until
fear of terrorism led to resumption in 2002.
Hospital Rock has for two centuries rested on the periphery
of Farmington history. Since even local historians have been
uncertain of its location, it has acquired an aura of mystery
and romance. Yet it has remained a very meaningful artifact,
speaking to us in a direct and moving way from the past. In the
last few years, however, there has been renewed and effective
interest in its preservation. While the site is actually in
Farmington , the land is owned by Hartford , which purchased it
for its watershed. In 2002 the Connecticut Historical Commission
declared Hospital Rock and the surrounding forest to be an
Historic Archeological Site, and Farmington is collaborating
with Hartford in a move to gain easement protection for the
site. An archeological search for the remains of the hospital
itself is projected for the near future. There remains, however,
the intriguing question of how to preserve the inscribed slab of
bedrock out in the woods.
Dr. Charles Leach is a retired
cardiologist, former director of cardiology at New Britain
General Hospital , and clinical professor of medicine at UCONN.
He is also past president of the Farmington Historical Society,
and a member of the Farmington Historic District Commission.
REFERENCES
• Bickford, Christopher P. Farmington in
Connecticut .
Phoenix Publishing, Conway , N.H. , 1982.
• Fenn, Elizabeth A. Pox Americana . The Great
Smallpox Epidemic of 1775-82. Hill and Wang , New York ,
2001.
• Jensen, Oliver, ed. The Miracle of Connecticut .
2 nd Edition. Connecticut Historical Society and Fenwick
Productions, Hartford , 1995.
• Leach, Charles N., Jr. "Farmington Physicians and
Their Times." The Farmington Historical Society News.
Farmington , Ct. , April 1999.
• Leach, Charles N., Jr. "Hospital Rock Families."
The Farmington Historical Society News. Farmington , Ct. ,
May 2003.
• Mathewson, Rufus W. The History of Middlesex
County 1635 - 1885. J.H. Beers and Co., New York . 1884.
• Porter, Noah, Sr. "Half-Century Discourse; on
Occasion of the Fiftieth Anniversary of his Ordination."
Farmington and Hartford , 1857.
• Roop, Jonathan Crane M.D. "Hospital Rock: A New
Story." May 2002.
• Shepard, James. "The Small-Pox Hospital Rock at
Farmington Conn. " Connecticut Quarterly, Vol. 1 No. 1, pp.
50-55. January 1895.
• Timlow, Heman R. Ecclesiastical and Other Sketches of
Southington, Conn. Case, Lockwood and Brainard Co., Hartford Ct
1875. Reprinted 1976 under sponsorship of the Southington
Bicentennial Committee. Walsworth Publishing Co., Inc.,
Marceline , MO.

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