Sunday, September 26, 2021

CGYHU Oct. 2021


As part of the Carmine Guica Young Historians (CGYH) program, the Cavendish Historical Society (CHS) provides teachers, students, families and the community with information on town, state and national history for the month ahead.

 

GENERAL INFORMATION

• If you have questions, want to arrange for a program or need more information, call 802-226-7807 or e-mail margocaulfield@icloud.com

• If you want to know more about the various programs that CHS offers for students and community, as well as opportunities close to Cavendish, go to the Resource Page

• Covid: CHS staff and volunteers are all vaccinated. We follow the VT Agency on Education (AOE) guidance, school districts as well as Centers for Disease Controls & Prevention (CDC). At this time, anyone coming to the Museum must wear a mask.

• The CHS Cares Closet is located next to the steps of the Museum. We include history kits, masks, arts and crafts supplies, books, puzzles, games etc. This is open 24/7 and everything is free. If you have items you’d like to donate, or are looking for specific items, please contact us at the above numbers.

 

FOR CAVENDISH HOME LEARNERS

If you would like to have your child participate in programs CHS offers at CTES, please contact the office to fill out paperwork for emergency purposes. FMI: 802-875-7758.

 

The third grade will be visiting Coolidge on Sept. 30. We are scheduling a variety of trips and activities so recommend that If you have a home school student, please check with the teachers connected with the various grade levels by going to the CTES teachers page on the school’s website.

 

Susannah Johnson

SHARE THE SUSANNAH JOHNSON STORY

Mrs. Johnson gave birth to the first child of European descent, Captive,” in Cavendish in 1757. She wrote about her experience, “A Narrative of the Captivity of Mrs. Johnson.” CHS has a copy of the original, which is bound in wood. Johnson erected stones to mark this event, which have been relocated to route 106 in Reading. The birth took place off Tarbell Hill Rd.

 

In her book, Johnson provides a very interesting perspective about how they were treated by the Abenaki (much better than the French or English). Interestingly, we have researched the path the family took and it’s close to the same path we take to the archeological dig at the Bruckner Preserve (Poultney and Lake Champlain intersect).

 

A timeline of this event is at the CHS blog

 


“CalicoCaptive”  by Elizabeth George Speare is a historical fiction children’s book that is heavily based on the diary, The book should be available from the Cavendish Library or Fletcher Community Library in Ludlow. If there is interest, we can do a reading group and visit both the site of the stones as well the birth place.

 

OCTOBER  DATES/EVENTS

National Hispanic American Heritage Month (Sept 15-Oct. 15): Honors the cultures and contributions of both Hispanic and Latino Americans

Resources from the Library of Congress, National Archives and Records Administration, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Gallery of Art, National Park Service, Smithsonian Institution and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

 

Oct. 5, 1829: Chester A. Arthur, the 21st president of the United States, was born in Fairfield, Vermont. Arthur was vice-president under President Garfield and became president when Garfield was assassinated in 1881.

 

Oct. 7, 1827: Abby Maria Hemenway, the compiler of the Vermont Historical Gazetteer, was born in Ludlow. Hemenway had been a schoolteacher, but decided to ask "a reliable person in every town in Vermont" to write down all he or she could about the town's history. She worked for thirty years and finally published four thick volumes. Learn more about Hemenway.

 


Oct. 11 (Monday):  Indigenous Peoples Day in Vermont
(formerly Columbus Day)

• “BeforeColumbus” by Charles C. Mann.  The children’s version of Mann’s award winning book “1491.” Contrary to what so many Americans learn in school, the pre-Columbian Indians were not sparsely settled in a pristine wilderness; rather, there were huge numbers of Indians who actively molded and influenced the land around them. The Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan (Mexico City) had running water and immaculately clean streets, and was larger than any contemporary European city. Mexican cultures created corn in a specialized breeding process that it has been called human’s first feat of genetic engineering. Indians were not living lightly on the land but were landscaping and manipulating their world in ways that we are only now beginning to understand.

• What Really Happen: While a cartoon and quite short,  it accurately depicts Columbus and his activities. May not be appropriate for younger students. A great navigator he may have been, but he was no humanitarian. He was actively involved in the slave trade. 


 

• There are four bands of the Abenaki in Vermont. The Elnu is the tribe who covers the territory where we live. Visit their website to learn more about them.

Timeline for first peoples in VT

Native Knowledge 360 Education Initiative from the National Museum of the American Indian.  This is an excellence resource.

 

Oct. 14 (Wednesday): Cavendish Charter signed by King George in 1761. Capt. John Coffeen, Cavendish’s first legal settler helped to draft the VT Constitution, which he signed on July 8, 1777. There is a good article in VT Digger about Gov. Wentworth and how he illegally sold off Vermont land. 

 

Oct. 19, 1864: Civil War comes to VT. A small group of Confederate soldiers brought the Civil War home to Vermont by raiding St. Albans and robbing three banks. After killing one man and wounding others, they escaped into Canada.

 

Oct. 20, 1859: John Dewey, educator, philosopher, and reformer, was born in Burlington. Dewey believed that children learn best by doing. He changed the way school was taught in America and around the world.

 

Oct. 22, 1790: Should VT become the 14th state? On the motion of Stephen R. Bradley of Westminster, the general assembly calls a convention to decide whether Vermont should ratify the United States Constitution and join the Union as the fourteenth state.

 

Oct. 31 (Sunday):  Halloween & Day of the Dead (Dia de Muertos) is a cross quarter day,” marking the midway point between the autumn equinox and winter solstice. Called Samhain (“sow-win”), or summer’s end, in Ireland, this is a Gaelic festival marketing the end of the harvest season and the beginning of winter or the “darker half” of the year.

 

This is the day that barriers between the physical world and the spirit world break down, allowing more interaction between humans and those who have passed. It was expected that ancestors might cross over during this time as well, and Celts would dress as animals and monsters so that fairies were not tempted to kidnap them. Eventually, Oct. 31 became known as All Hallows Eve or Halloween, and many of the customs adopted in 19th century America came from Irish immigrants.

 


Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) is celebrated throughout South America, though it is most associated with Mexico. The traditions mix Christian influence with ancient Indian (Mayan, Aztecs, Incas, Kichwa ) practices. Like the Irish and other cultures, they believe this is the time when the veil between this world and the next is lowered. Many parts of South America celebrate the day by remembering loved ones who have died by making altars (ofrendas) with special flowers, food and drink, pictures and special objects associated with a departed friend or family member. It is a positive honoring of the dead and it involves going to church, cleaning cemeteries and visiting with friends and family. In Guatemala, giant kites are constructed and flown in the cemeteries.

Monday, September 13, 2021

Phineas Gage: Handout from 173rd Anniversary Walk & Talk

 


Today, Sept. 13, is the 173rd anniversary of the Phineas Gage accident. Below is the handout from yesterday's Walk & Talk.

TIMELINE

Life in 1848: California Gold Rush begins; Seneca Falls Convention (first women’s rights group); Cholera epidemic in New York kills 5,000; French Revolution; The Communist Minifesto is published; Boston Public Library is founded; Wisconsin becomes the 30th state; James Polk is president; the first medical school for women opens in Boston;  the Great Famine continues in Ireland; injuries very common from falls, horse kicks and gunfire; doctors were not required to be licensed.

 

1844: John Martyn Harlow graduates from Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia. While there learns about trepanning to drain pus from a head injury, a technique he would use on Gage. He kept the exit wound open at the base of the skull for drainage

 

1844-1857: Harlow practiced medicine in Cavendish. Left due to poor health

 

1846 Dr. Jacob Bigelow publishes "Insensibility during Surgical Operations Produced by Inhalation". Boston Med Surg J. 35 (16): 309–317. detailing the discovery of ether anesthesia. 200 years later his article is voted the most important article in NEJM.

 

1848, Sept. 13: Phineas Gage accident

 

1848, Nov. 25: Approximately 10 weeks after his accident, Gage returns to his parents home in Lebanon, NH

 

Dec. 1848 Harlow authors: "Passage of an iron rod through the head". Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 39 (20): 389–393. Follow up note appears the early part of 1849

 

Feb. 1949: "Able to do a little work about the horses and barn, feeding the cattle etc. [and] as the time for ploughing came [i.e. about May or June] he was able to do half a day's work after that and bore it well". In August his mother told an inquiring physician that his memory seemed somewhat impaired, though slightly enough that a stranger would not notice.

 

April 1849: Returns to Cavendish and visits Harlow who notes loss of vision in the left eye. “Upon the top of the head ... a quadrangular fragment of bone ... raised and quite prominent. Behind this is a deep depression, two inches by one and one-half inches [51 by 38 mm] wide, beneath which the pulsations of the brain can be perceived. Partial paralysis of the left side of the face. His physical health is good, and I am inclined to say he has recovered. Has no pain in head, but says it has a queer feeling which he is not able to describe.”

 

Nov. 1849: Bigelow, Professor of Surgery at Harvard, brings Gage to Boston for several weeks and, after satisfying himself that the tamping iron had actually passed through Gage's head, presented him to a meeting of the Boston Society for Medical Improvement

 

1850: Bigelow brought the Phineas Gage case out of complete obscurity into merely relative obscurity, and largely neutralized remaining scepticism about the case. "Dr. Harlow's case of Recovery from the passage of an Iron Bar through the Head". American Journal of the Medical Sciences. 20 (14): 13–22. Note that the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal becomes the New England Journal of Medicine

 

Aug. 1852: Gage goes to work as a long distance stage coach driver on the Valpariso -Santiago route in Chile.

 

1859: Due to ill health, Gage goes to San Francisco to be with his family, aarriving (in his mother's words) "in a feeble condition, having failed very much since he left New Hampshire ... Had many ill turns while in Valparaiso, especially during the last year, and suffered much from hardship and exposure." Recovers sufficiently to work for a farmer in Santa Clara

 

May 21 1860 Phineas Gage dies in San Francisco from epilepsy

 

1868: Harlow authors "Recovery from the Passage of an Iron Bar through the Head". Publications of the Massachusetts Medical Society. 2 (3): 327–47. Reprinted: David Clapp & Son (1869)

 

INJURY & RECOVERY

Gage’s Injury: When the tamping rod entered under the left check bone and exited his head, the left frontal lobe was damaged. Gage’s behavior post accident was described as impulsive, bad-tempered ne'er-do-well whose "friends and acquaintances said he was 'no longer Gage.'"

 

Research from UCLA Laboratory of Neuro Imaging: Part of the Human Connectome Project.

• Gage’s brain damage was far more profound and widespread than previously thought

• Estimated he lost small amounts of his cerebral cortex (4%) and more than 10% of his total white matter (the information superhighway of the brain). Some white matter was wiped out completely, others partially severed

• Brain damaged between frontal cortex and limbic system (emotions)

 

Neuroplasticity/Neuorgenesis: The human brain is a highly dynamic and constantly reorganizing system capable of being shaped and reshaped across an entire lifespan. Experience and environment alters the brain’s organization at some level. The key words in this new approach to the brain are neuroplasticity and neurogenesis.. Neuroplasticity is the ability of the brain to form new connections and pathways and change how its circuits are wired in response to the stimulation of learning and experience. Neurogenesis is the ability of the brain to grow new neurons. Fred “Rusty” Gage, a cousin of Phineas Gage, discovered that the human brain continues to produce new nerve cells into adulthood.

 

 

TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY RESOURCES

Brain Injury Association of VT  877-856-1772

 

• Brain Injury Assoc of NH  800-773-8400 (Family Helpline; 800-444-6443 (Information and Resources only) Can download “NH Resource Directory Brain Injury & Stroke 10th Edition,” lots of good information

 

• National Toll Free Brain Injury Resource Line 800-444-6443

 

 Cavendish Health & Senior Resources: Includes “Getting What You Need: A Checklist” that helps with planning and understanding resource availability locally. 

 

• My Stroke of Insight by Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor: Includes Forty Things I Needed Most. TED Talk


 

 

REFERENCES

Harlow, John M. "Passage of an iron rod through the head." Boston medical and surgical journal, v. 39, no. 20 (November 1848): 389-393.

 

Bigelow, Henry J. "Dr. Harlow's case of recovery from the passage of an iron bar through the head." American journal of the medical sciences, n.s. v.20 (July 1850): 13-22.

 

Harlow, John M. "Recovery from the passage of an iron bar through the head." Publications of the Massachusetts Medical Society, v.2 (1868): 327-347.

 

 

Brain and Behavior: Phineas Gage Revisited Scientific Frontiers 

 

No Longer Gage: An Iron Bar Through the Head 

 

Phineas Gage and the Enigma of the Prefrontal Cortex 

 

 

Cavendish Historical Society Annual Phineas Gage Walk & Talk 2021

margocaulfield@icloud.com 802-226-7807 PO Box 472, Cavendish VT 05142

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

CHS Briefs September 1, 2021

 If you have questions, would like to volunteer with CHS, or have items for the CHS Cares Closet please e-mail margocaulfield@icloud.com or call 802-226-7807.

 

 

UPCOMING EVENTS: Due to the increasing cases of Covid, masks are required in the Museum, regardless of vaccination status.  


September 12 (Sunday):
Annual Phineas Gage Walk & Talk, meet at the CHS Museum at 2 pm. Walk portion, round trip is about a mile and a half and includes a visit to the site of the accident.

October 3 (Sunday): Fitton-the Mill, the Firebug, and Everything in Between. Starting at 2 pm at the Museum, there will be a talk on the Fitton (Spring) Mill, the town that grew up around it-Fittonsville- and the man Robert “Firebug” Fitton who was responsible for its demise and lots of other property in the town of Cavendish. The talk will be following by a walk out to the site where the Mill, boarding house, and other structures once stood. Wear comfortable shoes and be prepared for walking on uneven terrain.

October 10 (Sunday): Indigenous People’s Day program, 2 pm at the Museum. Last day the Museum is open for the season.

December 12: Christmas Ghost Walk Proctorsville.

 

 

 

WHAT’S BEEN HAPPENING

Carmine Guica Young Historians: We’re hitting the ground running and have already scheduled a trip for the 3rd grade to Coolidge. Fifth and 6th grades will be participating in RiverSweep and we’re lining up projects as our students learn community stewardship through our Preserve and Serve program. They will be helping with fall chores for various groups including Gethsemane Church, Streetscapes, cemeteries and neighbors. If you know of someone who is in need of help, please contact us at the numbers above. 

 

Have any of the following items you would like to donate for this program?

• Leaf rakes

• Ladies size-one size fits all- gardening gloves (must be new)

• Utility buckets with spill-free spouts. 9 quart size. Must be of durable material. Gently used is fine.

 

Memories of a Teenage Pharmacist: Dan Churchill, who worked at Pollard’s store as their pharmacist through high school and into college, gave a fascinating talk on Aug. 15. While his work with Pollards was reduced to one day a week when he started college, which occurred the same year Park Pollard died in 1955, he continued to compound medicine until 1964 when the store closed.

 

Among the attendees was Marty Irons, a pharmacist at Beauchamp & O’Rourke in Rutland and author of Phalanx Against the Divine Wind: Protecting the Fast Carrier Task Force During World War 2.

 

It was fascinating to compare and contrast what Dan was doing in the 1950s to what Irons currently does. Dan’s first job requirement as a trainee under Pollard was to learn how to read physicians’ handwriting . He had no formal training, just an apprenticeship, while Irons graduated from a four year college pharmacy program. Dan spoke of working for various physicians as well as a veterinarian. Irons practice is focused on patient care and doesn’t fill animal prescriptions.

 

While Dan used a machine to make the pills, Irons has a technician to count out pills, which come prepackaged. Dan’s most frequent prescription was for coughs, while Irons is for cholesterol medication. The Rutland pharmacist said that they stopped compounding medicines about five years ago.

 

Today’s pharmacist serves a different role and are now part of the care team for complex medical cases where patients can be taking 15 to 20 medications a day, in addition to being a location for blood pressure checks and vaccinations. Learn more about how Irons and his practice at Rutland Pharmacist Teams Up with Hospital to Combat Dangerous Medication Errors.  

 


New at the CHS Blog:

• Summer Newsletter

10th Anniversary of Irene Remembrance

Carmine Guica Young Historians Back to School & Sept issue

 

 

 

CHS Cares Closet: Many are enjoying the Cares Closet. As we prepare for the fall and winter a head we’re in need of puzzles, art supplies and games. Please contact us at the numbers above if you have items to donate.

 

Donations for CHS can be sent to CHS, PO Box 472, Cavendish, VT 05142. Checks should be payable to the Cavendish Historical Society.