The Ether Monument in Boston
I will be discussing with us today The Ether Monument in Boston. Close to the intersection of Arlington Street and Marlborough Street, Stands an obscure monument that commemorates a medical breakthrough, the use of ether as a sculpture depicting the famous Biblical story of Good Samaritan caring an injured stranger he met on the road.
The first public demonstration of ether as an anesthesia was conducted at Massachusetts General Hospital in 1846 by Boston dentist William Thomas Green Morton and doctor John Collins Warren. Morton administered the ether and Warren then removed a tumor from the neck of an unconscious patient.
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The information of the successful demonstration spread throughout the world. The event was heralded as the end of a time when surgery was torture, and a serious operation to be dreaded only less than death itself.
A 19th century surgeon by name Johann Friedrich, stated, ‘pain, the highest consciousness of our earthly existence, the most distinct sensation of the imperfection of our body, must bow before the power of the human mind, before the power of ether vapor’.
The Ether monument was erected amidst much controversy. Motion needed credit for the discovery bog ether, but several doctors opposed to the claim. Chemist T. Jackson, Morton’s instructor insisted it was he who mixed the chemicals that Morton used in the surgery. So therefore, the distinction should belong to him.
Horace Wells, a dentist from Hartford Connecticut, also claimed to have produced anesthesia two years earlier with nitrous oxide, but when he was asked to show its effects publicly, he failed. It’s no longer hidden that Crawford Long of Georgia had been using ether in surgery since 1842, very long before Morton, but had been doing it privately and did not publish his findings or make them known to the medical community.
Oliver Wendell Holmes a professor at Harvard Medical School, was the one who handled the ether dispute. He also stated that the monument was to ‘ether or either’, alluding to the claimants of the discovery. On the contrary, Mark Twain unambiguously opposed Morton. He wrote that, ‘ there in Boston is a monument to the man who stole the discovery from another man.
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The monument is made of hard material, Twain was not correct, because the Ether Monument makes no mention of any of the claimants, but rather is solely a commemoration of the first effective public demonstration of ether anesthesia.
The monument itself is about 40 feet tall and is made by Boston architect William Robert Ware. Twenty years after Morton’s famous surgery it was commissioned by a private citizen. The crowning figure of the monument was made by sculptor John Quincy Adams Ward. This is all about The Ether Monument in Boston, if you find this article interesting, share to your friends and family. Happy reading!
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