About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

1 W. J. McKnight, The Pioneer Doctor [1] (1915)

handle is hein.slavery/piondr0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 




The Pioneer Do(or in Northwesfern Penn'a


Who Skinned the Nigger? Brook-
  ville's Pioneer  Resurrection-The
  Truth Told by the Only One Now
  Living of the Seven That Were En-
  gaged in It-The True Story of the
  Inception and Enactment of Penn-
  sylvania State Anatomical Law.


     By W. J. McKNIGHT, M. D.


  To everything there is a time and
a season.
         The Pioneer Doctor
  Medicine   was   practiced by the
Egyptian priests, and was so practic-
ed in Europe until A. D. 1163. Moses,
the lawgiver, was a doctor and learn-
ed in all the arts of the Egyptians.
  The pioneer and early doctor was
a useful citizen, and his visits to the
early settlers when afflicted was a
great comfort. How we all long now
to see the doctor when we are sick!
Our isolated people longed just the
same for the coming of their doctor.
The science of medicine then was very
crude, and the art of it very imper-
fect, hence the early practicioner had
but limited skill; yet while exercis-
ing whatever he professed for the
relief of  suffering, his  privations
and labor while traveling by night or
day on horse back with his old pill
bags were hard and severe in the
extreme.   The extent of his circuit
was usually from fifty to one hun-
dred miles over poor roads and paths,
swimming his horse through creeks
and rivers as best he could. I have
traveled  a circuit of one hundred
miles in my day. In those days every
one had respect for the doctor, and
every family along his circuit was
delighted with an opportunity to ex--


tend free hospitality to  the  doctor
and his horse.
   When I commenced the practice of
 medicine, I had to ride on horseback.
 My field extended all through and
 over Jefferson, Forest, Elk, as well
 as  the western   part of Clearfield
 county.   My rides were    long, day
 and night, through rain ,mud, sleet,
 cold, snow and darkness, with no
 rubber garments to protect me from
 storms. I have traveled the creek
 beds, forded  and swam    my   horse
 when the rivers were in rafting stage,
 drove over paths, and ridden many a
 time from dark until dayliight all
 alone through the wilderness, twenty,
 thirty or fifty miles, stopping about
 midnight at some cabin to give my
 horse a little feed.
   In those days there was no tele-
 graph, telephone or daily mail through
 which to summon a doctor, but a
 neighbor had to be sent on foot or on
 horseback to find a physician, and not
 to come back without him. I was a
 good  practical botanist  and   used
 mostly herbs and roots; these I gath-
 ered in the spring, summer and fall.
 Recipes were the fad' then. One of
 my preceptors had a book of these,
 which   I carefully copied, and any
 others I could find. Medical colleges
 were few, and medical literature was
 scarce. As doctors we knew but little,
 and had to rely on what common-
 sense we possessed. My partner, Dr.
 Niver, made what he called Devil's
 broth. It was a mixed decoction of
 about all our roots and herbs, to be
 administered, as he   said, with the
 hope that some one of the ingredients
 would hit the disease.
   Medicine and its practice was about
 all theory; remedies were crude and
 drastic. Instruments  few imperfect
 and clumsy. I feel amazed when I
!think how ignorant I .was, yet I tied


Reproduced with permission from the University of Illinois at Chicago

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most