It can be said that the Lehigh Canal and Asa Packer’s Lehigh Valley Railroad brought cholera to Carbon County in 1854. It could be told that cholera helped bring G. B. Linderman here, who eventually married Packer’s daughter Lucy, producing the only descendants of the Asa and Sarah Packer line. So amid the distress of those days, love bloomed here long before ever entering the vernacular with Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s novel.
Lucy Packer Linderman - Asa's only child to produce an heir, met her husband during the time of Cholera in Carbon. |
The cholera plague was the middle of three grave disasters to befall Mauch Chunk (today's Jim Thorpe): The Fire of 1849, Cholera in 1854 and the Great Flood of June of 1862.
(Every major business was touched by the fire, including Packer's General Store, the court house, and every structure around Hazard Square, save the still standing Hotel Switzerland (today's "Molly Maguire Pub.") built around 1829. There were many devastating floods in Mauch Chunk's history, but the one in 1862 was particularly deadly. It destroyed the Upper Grand section of the Lehigh Canal from White Haven to Mauch Chunk: the successively breached dams caused tidal waves, claiming as many as 200 lives.)
The cholera epidemic started here five years to the month on the heels of the July 1849 fire. This post is the first of a series of posts to examine the impact of contagious diseases on the lives of the people of Carbon County.
Dr. Henry Richard Linderman, "H. R." - Gained most notoriety with the Federal Reserve, but selflessly came to the aid of the sick of Mauch Chunk in the summer of 1854. |
They were the so called “good old days,” before antibiotics,
when unexpected deaths due to an array of contagious illnesses such as scarlet
fever, diphtheria, or typhoid fever were commonplace. Anecdotes abound of people being as healthy
as a horse in the morning, working an honest day along the canal or railroad but
who were dead and buried by the evening.
Other diseases such as pneumonia and “consumption” (known
today by tuberculosis) also took down many before their prime and thus lowering
our average life expectancy. These untreatable infections diseases are the prime reason for the lower life expectancy of the time. A person had a good chance to live into their 70s if they could avoid them.
In many cases, with scarlet fever, smallpox, and
during the cholera outbreaks, several members of the same family would take ill
at once. And because of these yet to be
understood mystery germs, services were held in private, many times conducted
under the cover of darkness to both avoid further spread and in some instances,
family shame.
The spread of cholera in particular was a
world-wide event, handled in our burgeoning community of about 3,500 that was
intensified by the transportation boom occurring here at the time. It is history like this that makes careful
analysis so important for we gain a greater understanding of the world on the
whole when we do.
Before 1817, cholera was a problem only found in the
Far East. It wasn’t until the first
world-wide outbreak of 1832 when it hit the U.S. The symptoms were strikingly similar to those
of arsenic poisoning: debilitating diarrhea, spasmodic vomiting and dreadfully
painful cramping. It has been written
that some had used the cloak of a cholera outbreak to rid themselves of an undesired
business partner or even an unwanted member of the family by slipping them a
fatal dose of the poison.
Unlike many other infectious diseases, cholera only
impacted the United States for a thirty-four year span. The last major outbreak occurred in
1866. The number of deaths in Mauch
Chunk due to cholera from July to October of 1854 is most likely in the thirty
to fifty range. (As of August 17th, only three weeks into the scourge, the Mauch Chunk Gazette estimated "ten to fifteen" people had died locally. Deaths would continue through September, some succumbing into October, including Dr. Righter. However, the Carbon Democrat reported two days later, on August 19th, that there had only been nine fatalities thus far.)
Though diseases such as malaria, typhoid and scarlet
fever were an insidiously ever present part of life, it was the sudden
outbreaks that could whip a community into a frenzy. However, historically all told, few Americans
died of cholera. For each case of cholera,
there were scores more who died of the other diseases.
Though Zachary Taylor didn’t die of Asiatic cholera,
he did die of a variety known at the time as “cholera morbus,” a type of
dysentery. Some blamed his death on his
meal of raw cherries and iced milk at a hot July 4th 1850 fundraiser for the
Washington Monument.
Several of his cabinet suffered with similar
symptoms which is what eventually led to the 1991 investigation to rule out assassination
by arsenic poisoning, which it did indeed do.
Vice President Millard Fillmore became just the second person to ascend
to the office due to death of the president.
Despite contrary scientific evidence, the laying of blame
onto the consumption of green or raw fruits and vegetables continued into the
20th century. The September
1905 cholera morbus death of Sallie Zwiller, a Reading “factory girl,” was
purportedly from eating a “green apple.”
And the diphtheria death of Henry Small Coombe of North Scranton was
blamed on “bathing in the foul waters of the Lackawanna River.”
Cholera could spread person to person from contact with
an infected person’s feces, certainly something that could be held in check
with hand washing (much like the infamous “Typhoid Mary”). Should said feces come in contact with raw
fruits or vegetables, well then yes one could contract the sickness from
uncooked or unwashed foods, but these means were not generally responsible for widespread
outbreaks.
Cholera, like typhoid, can be spread along “any pathway
leading to the human digestive tract.” The
chief culprit was the poor sanitation with raw sewage contaminating the untreated
water supply. (Much credit for this article comes from Charles E. Rosenberg's "The Cholera Years," University of Chicago Press (1962).)
City tenements were known for crude efforts toward
sanitation and were often devoid of the luxury of fresh water. As a consequence, cholera and other
infectious diseases of the day were inextricably tied to areas of “filth and
want,” particularly hitting those living in crowded conditions. It came to be known by some as “the scourge
of the sinful.”
Indeed the poor suffered disproportionately from
these diseases than did the more affluent. The poor, caught in the “blame the
victim” cycle, were believed to get their due for their “slothful and
intemperate ways.”
The nation though surely had to find exception to
this bias when it heard the news of the deaths of recently widowed former President
Millard Fillmore’s daughter and his half-brother who died of cholera within
twenty-four hours of each other.
(His wife Abigail died of fever twenty-six days
after leaving the White House, taking sick at the inauguration of his
successor, Franklin Pierce, in March of 1853.
So yes, the well to do did indeed experience death by disease in those
days through no fault of their own!)
On July 26th of 1854, Mary Abigail
Fillmore took ill in Flemington New Jersey, not far off from the nearly
completed Lehigh Valley Railroad right-of-way.
Her illness was surely part of the emergence of the same cholera that
came to plague Carbon.
In her sickened state, she wanted desperately to
reach her home in Buffalo. She made it there,
but like many of its victims, she died less than
twenty-four hours after initially becoming ill on July 26th. She was just twenty-two.
On July 27th, Charles D. Fillmore was
stricken while driving on a stagecoach from St. Paul to Stillwater, Minnesota,
but managed to get back to St. Paul before he died. His cholera death prompted
St. Paul livery teams to carry a bottle of “cholera medicine” under the driver’s
seat.
Mauch Chunk Gazette - August 3, 1854 announces the death of President Fillmore's half-brother Charles, who did indeed die of cholera, with 24-hours of Abigail Fillmore. |
From an 1882 Perry Davis advertisement. |
"Perry Davis' Pain Killer" was a mixture of whisky, tincture of opium, and tincture of capsicum. It was administered internally but it was also suggested to be applied to the afflicted’s abdomen. Three days later, the niece of Charles Fillmore's wife also died of cholera.
It was Dr. John Snow of London who was able to
empirically prove to the medical establishment the connection between poor
sanitation and the cholera outbreaks. He
established his theory in the 1849 outbreak, but it wasn’t until the one in
1854 that allowed him to apply and prove it.
“The Broad Street pump incident” is the most famous example, but the
scope of the contamination was much broader than at just that pump.
Dr. Snow of London, considered to be the "Father of Epidemiology" empirically proved cholera was caused by a contagion in the water supply. |
London had two competing water supply companies: The Lambreth drew its water from the Thames above London while the Southmark and Vauxhall drew its water from below London on the lower Thames. Neither company treated the drinking water before it reached their customer. Of course it was the water from the latter company that came to prove Dr. Snow’s theory as their water was contaminated by raw sewage entering the Thames from London.
July 27, 1854 - The Mauch Chunk Gazette reported -
“The Cholera – Is spreading over the country, especially at the west, north and east. - The southern part of the country is now the healthiest part of the Union. The number of deaths in Brooklyn NY last week was greater than in either Baltimore or New Orleans...In Easton and vicinity there have been several deaths, mostly foreigners. The work on the Valley RR in that section has been suspended.”
”
Mauch Chunk Gazette - July 27, 1854
Surely, the clean living people of Mauch Chunk would
be once again spared. The major
outbreaks of the disease of 1832 and 1849 missed us here in Carbon County, giving
many the false belief that our elevation was “above the Cholera line,”
believing our elevation alone put us high enough in the atmosphere to be above
its deadly effects.
July 27, 1854 - The Mauch Chunk Gazette reported -
“Cholera Mark – That cholera is not apt to prevail in the elevated regions is very certain. We recollect reading, some years since, that Hollidaysburg is “above Cholera.” If this be so, we suppose Mauch Chunk may be considered a safe retreat at the present time. Those, however who prefer a still greater altitude, will find ample accommodations at White Haven, Beaver Meadow, Hazelton or Summit Hill.”
"Cholera Mark" - Mauch Chunk Gazette July 27, 1854 |
Most physicians did not understand the cause of the
disease. The contagion, Vibrio cholera,
was not identified until after the 1854 pandemic. Though many doctors intuitively attributed
the disease to something unseen and yet to be empirically recognized, most
doctors surveyed at the time attributed outbreaks to “a disturbance in the
atmosphere” and perhaps as Daniel Drake asserted to a “small winged insect not
visible to the naked eye.”
Victims of our Own Success:
The coal industry placed Carbon County at the center
of the industrial revolution. Charles
Francis Adams (John Qunicy’s son) wrote of the 1832 outbreak that cholera “followed
the tracks of commerce, which would seem to sustain the doctrine of contagion,”
ironic and prophetic words for Carbon’s outbreak.
19th Century Workmen on the Lehigh Canal, Following the "Tracks of Commerce" - Foreigners, laborers and travelers were blamed for the outbreak as they were among the population hardest hit. |
It is unclear how it spread through Mauch
Chunk. There is little to question that
it came here by travelers and workers by way of the canal from Easton.
Certainly commerce played a significant role.
It is easy to imagine a traveler arriving here in
the early stages of illness, ducking into one of the numerous stables all along
Broadway, relieving themselves and releasing scores of the bacteria into such a
host environment as a stable full of manure.
Besides coal, the canal boats were employed hauling
all manner of materials needed along its route including manure. One can see the lowly stable hand tracking
the germs into his home or eating a meal with unwashed hands. Boats traveled from here to Philadelphia, to New York and all points in between. All potentially unsuspecting
carriers of plague.
(The Lehigh Canal, from White Haven to Easton, connected
to Philadelphia via the Delaware and Raritan Canal. It connected to New York City via the Morris
Canal. The Raritan Canal connected the
Delaware Canal with the Raritan River servicing both Philadelphia and New York
City. The Morris Canal connected
northern New Jersey to the Hudson River.
All of these systems were operational after the 1830s.)
Besides travel and spread from the Lehigh Canal, Packer’s Lehigh Valley Railroad was nearing completion. Final work was halted due to the 1854 cholera
outbreak. The papers pointed a veiled finger toward the canal men and rail workers who had become sick as culprits who brought the disease to our purported little elevated sanctuary.
One of the first deaths of cholera that summer was that
of Lewis Lewis of Summit Hill (Prior to his employ with the railroad, Mr. Lewis
(b. 1815), a resident from Wales since at least 1850, worked in the mines in
Banks Township. He had a his wife Esther
(b. 1816) and seven children: John (b. 1840), Ann (b. 1841), Mary (b. 1842),
Jane (b. 1843), Margaret (b. 1845) and William (b. 1849):
The First Reported Carbon County Cholera Death -
July 27, 1854 - The Mauch Chunk Gazette reported -
July 27, 1854 - The Mauch Chunk Gazette reported -
“One
death by disease occurred at Connor’s Hotel, Mauch Chunk last Thursday. Mr. Lewis Lewis, a Welchman, employed by
Belford, Sharpe & Co as a boss on the North Penn RR arrived in the
Allentown Stage late in the evening, was attacked in the night, and died the
next morning. We understand that after
this situation was known, he was carefully and assiduously attended to by the
family and others about the house. He
resided at Summit Hill, and has left a wife and family.
Some
cases have been reported among the boatmen on the canal in this vicinity; but
we have not heard the particulars or the result.”
First Local Cholera Death Reported - Mauch Chunk Gazette - July 27, 1854 |
In addition to the rapidly expanding rail travel and
immigrant workers seemingly arriving here from everywhere at once, tourists also
began to arrive to simply ride the Switchback Railroad. This new-found mobile society already had a well-established
stagecoach route that connected it to many communities.
One could travel from Mauch Chunk on a coach and be
in White Haven in six hours (at $1.25 per rider). For another dollar and another six hours, a
traveler could be in Wilkes-Barre. The
stage ran six days a week, including clear through the winter.
For Carbon County, everything revolved around coal
and its transportation, it was big business. And cholera was bad for
business. It could not have hit at a
more critical time. In poker parlance,
Packer was “all in.” The Lehigh Valley
Railroad was his biggest gamble and the success was far from certain.
Asa Packer gambled on the Lehigh Valley Railroad in 1854 - Without it, Lehigh University would never have been endowed and perhaps Dr. G.B. Linderman would have never married Packer's daughter Lucy. |
In the final analysis, Packer had to feel a sense of
tremendous gratitude toward the Linderman brothers for their service in helping
this mecca of commerce to weather the storm.
Their service perhaps helped Packer regain the stability necessary for
the final launch of his fledgling railroad.
Larger cities like Philadelphia, Baltimore and St Louis established boards of health. Among their first actions were to set up hospitals. The New York Board of Health was unable to find landlords who were willing to
lease temporary space to serve as a hospital for the sick and dying.
They paid a high rent for an unfinished warehouse with
a leaky roof and openings still not fitted for windows. The mosquitoes which freely visited patients
along with the lack of clean water and sanitation exacerbated their problems.
The local newspapers in Carbon County seemed to strike a careful
balance in message. They did not ignore
the obvious nor did they incite hysteria. It is certain the business stakeholders held
sway over what was printed. Some ink
explained the number of local and national deaths but at the same time trying
to assuage public fear.
The local paper relayed the following story of two weary
women travelers:
August 31, 1854 - The Mauch Chunk Gazette printed the following letter from "Springville, Susquehanna Co."
August 31, 1854 - The Mauch Chunk Gazette printed the following letter from "Springville, Susquehanna Co."
“Messrs. Editors:Owing to the extreme warmth of the weather, the abundance of dust, and the little accommodations offered by the mail hacks on the Susquehanna, our journey to this place was very tedious and unpleasant, and I would recommend to those whom business and pleasure invites to this section, to take the Scranton Stage to Wilkes Barre and the L. & W. RR cars at Scranton.
You cannot imagine what exaggerated accounts of the Cholera in Mauch Chunk have reached the towns through which we travelled. At White Haven we found two Misses Y_____s, from Yardleyville, who wished to visit Tamaqua, and fearing to go through Mauch Chunk, came to us to Wilkes Barre, where they took the Packet for Catawissa, thence by R.R. to Tamaqua, about 100 miles. In this vicinity, rumor had reported 80 deaths by Cholera in Mauch Chunk, and it was not until the article from the Gazette was circulated among the people here through the local papers that the public mind was disabused of the false impressions. The drought in this vicinity is more severe than was before known at this season of the year…”
Mauch Chunk Gazette - August 31, 1854 |
The ‘letter’ was more likely a personal editorial
written by a member of the Springville paper.
It continues to another column, hitting many topics including politics,
and the dusty summer.
The outbreaks were claiming hundreds in cities like
London, New York, Baltimore and Cincinnati, Philadelphia, and folks in Mauch
Chunk hoped the conventional wisdom at the time held true, that we were “above
the cholera line” that our altitude and fresh mountain air would prevent such
an epidemic here.
August 3, 1854 - The Mauch Chunk Gazette reported -
“The Cholera – Baltimore, Saturday, July 29 – Great mortality from cholera is reported in Burke County Georgia. Out of 57 cases in one locality no less than 50 proved fatal.
“The Cholera – Baltimore, Saturday, July 29 – Great mortality from cholera is reported in Burke County Georgia. Out of 57 cases in one locality no less than 50 proved fatal.
Seven deaths from
cholera have occurred at Wheeling VA, during the past three days.
Philadelphia, July 30 –
Four members of one family were interred this afternoon who died from cholera
on Friday and Saturday – father, mother, and two sons. Three children survive, two of whom are very
sick.
Philadelphia, Saturday
July 29th – The Board of Health report 573 deaths during the week
ending today. 70 of them were from
Cholera, 105 from cholera infantum, 39 dysentery, 21 diarrhea, and 11 cholera
morbus.
Nine new cases and
eight deaths from cholera have occurred in the Alms House during the
twenty-four hours ending noon today.
Boston July 30 – There
were twenty-two deaths by cholera for the week ending Saturday noon.
The deaths in this city
during the week ending at noon today were 180.
Deaths in NY last week
over 1,100.”
August 9, 1854 - The local paper in Flemington New Jersey reported -
A Mr. Higgins, died on
Sunday afternoon last, at the residence of his brother-in-law,
Mr. Adam Bellis, in
Raritan township, near Kuhl's Mills, of Cholera. Mr. H. was keeper of the Poor
at or near New Brunswick...
August 10, 1854 - The Mauch Chunk Gazette reported -
“The Cholera. – This
disease still prevails extensively throughout the country. The number of deaths in NY city last
week was 280; total number of deaths 1135 – a majority of whom were
children.
In this town there has
been considerable sickness. Two or three
children have died this week.
The Easton papers
publish names of about one hundred persons who died there during the month of
July – several of them by cholera.
Mr. John Burt of
Easton, aged 67 and his wife, aged 53, died on the 30th.
About a dozen deaths
occurred at Lambertsville and an egual number at New Hope on Sunday last.”
It is fairly certain, Drs. Thompson and Righter the
possible exceptions, that no citizen of means died from the disease in Mauch
Chunk. The more affluent had their own
water supply, they kept their own carriage and livery, and they could afford to
avoid the areas of public contamination.
Whereas a workaday citizen had to continue among
their normal haunts, all the while more open to susceptibility to the
cholera. It hit people like Mr. Lewis
riding the public stagecoach, visitors of Mrs. Troy’s boarding house and
residents of Cornelius Connor’s hotel (today’s Inn at Jim Thorpe).
The poor and those who associated with them were
most susceptible. Case in point is the
death of Mr. Bellis. The blight of the
Irish at this time and on up to the “Day of the Rope” in June of 1877 is
well-documented. The German immigrant
was also disparaged by some natives who feared foreigners. Some felt the German diet invited cholera,
admonishing their “green vegetables, sauerkraut, and strong beer.”
Acts of courage and compassion were certainly part
of the tragedy as well. Bishop John Neumann, the father of the parochial school system, paved the way to his eventual sainthood by arriving here from Philadelphia just ahead of the outbreak in the summer of
1854. He set up quarters in the basement
of the new Immaculate Conception Church on Broadway. Both he and the new Father Coffey answered
the calls of the sick and dying both day and night.
It is not known what happened to Father Coffey, he disappears from the
area in October of 1854. There is no
burial record of him nor is there any lead as to his assignment to another
church. Consider my speculation of the possibility that Father Coffey was among the nameless local victims of cholera.
As in the following article, most of the names were
never published. Cholera promoted
anonymity. With families too wrought
with grief and fear, some too tried to conceal the fact of the illness had
visited their home. The potential for castigation
and shunning by their neighbors and business associates made the disease an
embarrassment most wished to hide. Unless of course a detailed journal from that time appears, it is unlikely we'll ever know the full extent of cholera’s effects here in Carbon.
“Sickness and death – Since our last some ten or fifteen persons have died in this vicinity of Cholera and Cholera Morbus. Among them Mr. and Mrs. Jacob West, Mrs. Leonard Blakeslee, Mr. Joseph Hunter, Catherine Keen and child…Solomon Teel of Wilkes Barre.August 17, 1854 - The Mauch Chunk Gazette reported -
(Dr. John Thompson was attended by both of the Linderman brothers as well as Drs. McConnel, Longshore and Brass. He died on August 19th, 1854. Dr. William Righter though stricken with the illness in mid-August didn't succumb until October 11th.)_____ Cutter of Newark, casting a gloom over the community such as was never before witnessed in Mauch Chunk.Many more remain sick, two of our most skillful physicians among the number. Mr. West died Tuesday night and Mrs. West on Wednesday morning, leaving a large family of orphan children. We have not time to dwell further upon the mournful subject this week. Every precaution has been taken to prevent the spread of the disease.”
Dr. and Mrs. Thompson's grave in the Upper Mauch Chunk Cemetery. |
Do No Harm -
Absent modern antibiotics and electrolyte-restoring
fluids, the best a doctor could do was keep their patients comfortable and as
hydrated as possible, with water (including ice-chips, where available) that
was hopefully not contaminated with the cholera bacteria.
However common treatments of the day may not have
been so benign. Many physicians used varying
combinations of a three-pronged attack of: 1.) Calomel, a chalky mercury
compound used as a care-all, 2.) Laudanum (opium the key ingredient) and 3.) to
administer a good bloodletting or bleeding.
The above were considered to be “conservative
treatments.” The radical doctors tried
tobacco smoke enemas, electric shock, and injection of saline solutions into
the veins. The president of the New York
State Medical Society suggested plugging up the rectum with beeswax or oilcloth
to bottle up the diarrhea.
Some who claimed to know the best cure in fact just
got lucky with a few patients who either did not actually have cholera or at
worst a minor case of it. Though most
were well-intentioned and through no fault of their own, physicians were
administering treatments that had little to do with an effective outcome. This in addition to unscrupulous
practitioners led many to hold the lot of doctors in low regard.
Some of the less savory were known to conjure up
patients who claimed to be cured by the doctor’s “special method,” some staging
miracle cures by healing shill patients to simply profit from the
outbreak. Also particularly harmful to
public opinion was the custom by some to charge exorbitant fees during times of
virulent outbreaks.
The good doctors of Mauch Chunk seemed to have been
treated with respect, at least by the local papers of that time, speaking highly
of them all. Dr. H. R. Linderman arrived here to answer the plea of his brother G.B.
Linderman and arrived in Mauch Chunk to help heal.
Henry R. Linderman was permitted to leave from his
new appointment as director of the Philadelphia mint to return to the area to
help combat the disease, exemplifying uncommon valor and courage in coming
here. The same can be said of Garrett B.
Linderman for bravely standing in the way of the disease’s destructive path.
The Good Doctors Linderman –
Henry Richard (Dec 25, 1825) and Garrett Brodhead
(October 15, 1829) Linderman were born in Lehman, Pike County to Dr. John Jay
and Mrs. Rachel Brodhead Linderman. Dr.
John Linderman was born in 1787. “G. B.”
studied at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York City and
practiced with his father. He then took
over “H. R.”’s service to the Nesquehoning Coal Company around 1851, though
some sources cite 1854 as the year.
This is the same time when “H. R.” began a
distinguished career in service to his country eventually becoming an apt and able
director of the U.S. Treasury, authoring many papers including two books: “The
Proposed Mint: Why it should be in St. Louis” (1875) and “Money and Legal
Tender in the United States” (1877). (Both of these books are available for free on "Google Books.")
Henry was President Grant’s authority on all matters
associated with the monetary system and was an ardent proponent of replacing
our dual standard of gold and silver with just gold alone. This is what the “Coinage Act of 1873”
did. H. R. Linderman was the sole author
of that bill. One source mentions Henry
as serving the Union cause as a physician during the war.
March 9, 1851 - "Business Card Ad" - The Mauch Chunk Gazette –
“G. B. Linderman, MD – Tenders his
professional Services to the citizens of MC and vicinity. Office joining JR Struthers’ Law Offc.”
The "Prominent People Tied to Hopkin Thomas" site offers this indictment of G. B. Linderman:
“During the
subsequent cholera epidemic at Mauch Chunk he gave his services to the people
of that sorely stricken village, and with such zeal and success that they
earnestly solicited him to become a resident, and be continued to labor there
for ten years, making for himself a splendid reputation as a practitioner. His
abilities were recognized far beyond his immediate sphere, and he would
undoubtedly have soon been called to a higher place in the profession had it
not been that circumstances led him away from it altogether.”
September
21, 1854 – The Mauch Chunk Gazette reported -
Cholera
in Pittsburh…55 deaths in past 36 hours…
Cholera
at Columbia, Baltimore, Sept 15…there were seven deaths by cholera since 6 o’clock yesterday evening,
making ninety-one deaths in all.
Subscriptions are being made here for the Columbia sufferers.
The local
papers discontinued any mention of further area cholera deaths or illness, but
at the same time, did not declare an end of the contagion either. Though the folks in the vicinity of Easton were
still experiencing the full reaches of this plague, little was
written of any local deaths.
The last
local death was posted on September 13, 1854: “A Mr. German,
resident of this place, was attacked in the morning with the Cholera, and died
about five o'clock in the afternoon. He leaves a wife and three little
children.”
Of course G.
B. Linderman also goes on to a distinguished career away from medicine. By 1863 he was a partner in the East Sugar
Loaf Colliery, started the firm Packer, Linderman and Company with his
father-in-law Asa, and a partner in the Room Run Colliery with Douglas Skeer
another relative of the Packer dynasty of family and business partnerships.
Two years
after the cholera epidemic, “G. B.” married Lucy Packer on August 21,
1856. Before dying from a fall from a
horse, Lucy had the following children with Garrett: Sallie who married Warren
A. Wilbur, Robert P. Linderman and Garrett B. Lindeman II. (“G. B.” married again on March 16, 1880 to
Miss Frances Evans, a daughter of George Evans of New York City, having three
daughters: Lillian, Ida and Helen.)
Lucy
Packer Linderman was the only Packer child to bear children. Of those descendants members of the
Frick family carry on, as well as a few Linderman's. Many of whom have grandchildren and great grandchildren living today.
It was in 1870 when “G. B.” and Lucy built their
Fountain Hill, South Bethlehem home. But
as of the 1870 census, they were still living in Mauch Chunk. Living next to them on Broadway was the widow
of Dr. Righter and two of their living daughters.
Dr. Righter's grave in Upper Mauch Chunk Cemetery. |
The sons of Dr. Righter who died in their infancy. Note Robert died, less than a year old, at the start of the cholera troubles. The cause of their deaths is not known. |
The widow Jane Righter, assisted by her daughter
Annie, was “Post Mistress” of Mauch Chunk.
“Effie” Euphemia Righter was a music teacher. They had an African-American servant from Virginia
named Temple Gross living with them. Their
total personal estate was estimated to be valued at $900.
The 1870 census listed G.B. as a “coal
operator.” They had Sallie P. age 10,
Robert P. age 7, and Garrett Jr. age 5 at home along with two servants, a
nurse, a cook and an African American coachman from Virginia named Thomas Dixon
living with them. Their combined
personal estate was estimated at $769,000.
“G. B.” was an original member of the board of
trustees of Lehigh University, of which was created from a $10 million
endowment from his father in law Asa. He
was also a trustee of St. Luke’s Hospital also closely connected to the Lehigh
Valley Railroad. Other businesses were G.
B. Linderman & Co., Lehigh Valley National Bank of Bethlehem, Bethlehem
Iron Company (Bethlehem Iron was the forerunner to steel giant Bethlehem Steel
and was the nation’s leading producer of railroad track rails.) and the
founding member of the Association of the Bessemer Steel Companies of the
United States.
In 1903, his mansion in Fountain Hill was purchased
by Bethlehem and U.S. Steel magnate Charles M. Schwab, both he and his wife also
having other local ties.
It appears no amount of wealth could prevent the Lindermans
from entering an early grave, the years of toil and perhaps a predisposition to
heart disease were the culprits.
According to the American Medical Association’s “Deceased
Physicians Card File,” Henry Linderman died in Washington D.C. in 1879 at the
age of 53 due to “heart failure.” Garrett
died September 28, 1885 at his Fountain Hill home due to “congestion of the
brain.” He was only 55.
Robert Packer Linderman did not follow his father into medicine as father followed his own father. Rather, Robert rose through many of the same business ranks as "G. B." |
Garrett and Lucy’s son Robert Packer Linderman
followed his father into many of his business pursuits including becoming
President of the Lehigh Valley National Bank, becoming the nation’s youngest
national bank president up to that time.
He too died at an early age, only reaching his 39th year.
It is ironically sad that men so dedicated to the healing of others had such short lives themselves.
Further research must be conducted in the journals of the Lindermans (at perhaps Lehigh University) and for Saint Neumann's to find more information on this despairing time in Carbon's history.
The Garrett B. Linderman family grave site in Nisky Hill Cemetery, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania |
It has been said that Lucy met her demise from a fall from a horse. |
A son-in-law of Garrett and Lucy Linderman. |
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