Anna Pierce Hobbs Bixby
Anna Pierce Hobbs Bixby | |
---|---|
Born | Anna Pierce 1808 or 1812 |
Died | 1869 or 1873 (aged 61-65) |
Nationality | American |
Other names | Anna Bixby, Anna Bigsby, Anna Pierce Hobbs Bigsby, Anna Hobbs |
Occupation(s) | midwife, frontier doctor, dentist, herbologist, scientist |
Relatives | Isaac Hobbs (first husband), Eson Bixby (second husband) |
Medical career | |
Research | milk sickness |
Anna Pierce Hobbs Bixby, sometimes spelled Bigsby born Anna Pierce (1812–1873), was a midwife, frontier doctor, dentist, herbologist, and scientist in southern Illinois.[1]
Bixby discovered that white snakeroot, (Ageratina altissima) contains a toxin. When cattle consume the plant, their meat and milk become contaminated and cause the sometimes fatal condition milk sickness. One of the most notable and tragic cases of the "milk sickness," was that of Nancy Hanks Lincoln, the mother of Abraham Lincoln, who died at 34 years old in 1818.
Early life
Anna was the daughter of farmers, who had moved from Philadelphia and in 1828 settled in southeastern Illinois, close to what would become the village of Rock Creek. After finishing school, Anna travelled to Philadelphia to train in midwifery and dentistry, but on her return to Illinois she became the first physician in Hardin County and consequently, a general practitioner for her community. Anna Bixby may also have been the first female doctor in the state of Illinois. Others claimed, she was a midwife, from Tennessee, married to her first husband, Isaac Hobbs.
Research on milk sickness
She did thorough research of milk sickness, which was causing a good deal of fatality among both people and calves, including Anna's mother and sister.[2] Noting the seasonal nature of the disease, and the fact that sheep and goat milk were not affected she reasoned that the cause must be a poisonous herb. However, she was unable to determine the precise cause until she was shown the White Snakeroot by a medicine woman of the Shawnee tribe.
Experiments on a calf confirmed the toxic effect of Snakeroot. However, despite her efforts it was not until 1928 (55 years after her death) that research confirming her discovery was published. Her position as a frontier doctor and a woman would have made it hard for her to gain respect from the medical profession of the time.
Eson Bixby and his criminal activities
After Isaac Hobbs died, Anna Pierce Hobbs married her second husband, Eson Bixby, who turned out to be a notorious outlaw, around the region of Cave-In-Rock, on the Ohio River.
Death
Anna Hobbs Bixby died in Rock Creek, Hardin County, Illinois.
Legacy
According to local legend, Anna Bixby left a treasure trove concealed in a cave, named after her. The treasure is supposedly, buried in Rock Creek, Hardin County, Illinois and has never been found. A historical marker has been mounted in Anna Bixby's honor in Cave-in-Rock, Illinois, near her home. Also, in southern Illinois, the Anna Bixby Women's Center in Harrisburg, Illinois gives shelter and services to area abused women and children.
References
- ^ Bailey, Laurel (1996). "Dr. Anna and the Fight for the Milksick". Illinois History. Retrieved 5 May 2013. Citing
Kelly A. Cichy, Women Meet the Challenge in Southern Illinois History;
Lowell A. Dearinger, "Dr. Anna and the Milksick," Outdoor Illinois (March 1967);
Lowell A. Dearinger, "Free-Fer-Alls and Cornbread," Outdoor Illinois (October 1963);
William D. Snivelyand Louanna Furbee, "Discoverer of the Cause of Milk Sickness," Journal of the American Medical Association (June 1966)." - ^ Tabler, Dave. "The curse of Milk Sickness". Archived from the original on 2013-06-03.
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National Institutes of Health bshbdjsudbulletin, Issue 56 By National Institute of Health (U.S.), Hygienic Laboratory (U.S.) https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc5897/m1/3/
1985 DANIEL DRAKE SYMPOSIUM syllabus; online at https://kb.osu.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/1811/23063/V085N2_001.pdf;jsessionid=90E5D6EEF7C667AE0DF5733A41C70095?sequence=1
The Western journal of medicine and surgery, Volume 3, edited by Daniel Drake, Lunsford Pitts Yandell, Prentice & Weissinger, 1841"
Further reading
- Hall, Elihu Nicholas. Anna's War Against River Pirates and Cave Bandits of John A. Murrell's Northern Dive. Unpublished manuscripts in Southern Illinois University Rare Book Collections. Revised and published as Ballads From the Bluffs. 1948.