San Francisco’s First
Radiographer
In November of 1895 William
Conrad Roentgen first saw the bones of his hand on a fluorescent screen and
gave the name “X-rays” to the mysterious radiation that penetrated human flesh.
His
X-ray apparatus in Roentgen's lab, Würzburg. (photo by author) |
Elizabeth Fleischman was born in 1859 in El Dorado County. Her father
had arrived from Austria in the Gold Rush, settled in El Dorado, and later
moved to San Francisco. Elizabeth entered high
school and was later trained as
a bookkeeper. Her brother-in-law, Dr. Michael J.H.Woolf (with whom she lived
after her mother’s death) interested her in the new X-rays. She took a
quick course in electrical science and with borrowed money bought her own X-ray
apparatus. She quickly became adept at using it and offered X-ray and
fluoroscopy services to the medical community. She is first listed in the San
Francisco City Directory (an old version of the Yellow Pages) in 1897 as
“radiographer, X-ray laboratory, 611 Sutter”.
Elizabeth Fleischman |
From City Directory 1897 |
The Spanish-American War and subsequent
guerrilla activity in the Philippines after 1898 generated numerous injuries,
cared for at the Presidio of San Francisco. Many were brought to Fleischman’s
office in order to locate bullets and visualize fractures. Eventually the
military purchased their own equipment and Fleischman consulted at the Presidio.
She was especially skilled at using
Bullet in chest, Fleischman image (from Borden, WC, below) |
The American Roentgen Ray Society convened its first meeting in 1900.
They were interested in affiliating with the AMA but that would mean excluding non-physicians. But the members were so dependent on non-physicians like Fleischman
that they decided to remain independent. Strictly speaking, doctors became
“radiologists” while others were “radiographers”.
Early X-ray images were developed on glass plates coated with silver
emulsions, and exposure times were one to
twenty minutes depending on body part.[ii]
Before long Elizabeth was making dental images and later added cancer treatment
to her repertoire. She made radiographs of animals and took others for artistic
reasons, submitting some to Camera Craft Magazine.
She was a member of the American Roentgen Society and contributed many images
to their collection.
Elizabeth paid a price for her
innovative work. The beams from the early X-ray tubes were not well focused,
the exposures were long, and she worked up to twelve hours a day with
unprotected hands. It was common to place one’s hand in the beam to check
exposure quality. By 1903 a dermatitis was irritating her hands, attributed to
darkroom chemicals. By 1904 ulcerations appeared, then a carcinoma. She
consented to local excision but refused amputation. Next her axillary glands enlarged,
and in January 1905 an arm, scapula, and adjacent clavicle were removed as her
only hope of recovery. But to no avail, and she succumbed to cancer on August
3, 1905, a victim of her own pioneering work.[iii]
Elizabeth Fleischman was not the only early user to suffer.
Clarence Dally was a glassblower who worked for Thomas Edison making
light bulbs. Edison created an early fluoroscope and assigned Dally to
demonstrate it and similar instruments to customers. He encountered the same
dermatitis, ulcers, and local cancers on his hands. He was treated with skin
grafts, then amputation of the left hand, four fingers of the right hand, and
finally amputation of both arms before he fell victim to metastatic cancer.
Walter James Dodd was born in London, came to the U.S. at age 10, and
worked in Boston. He happened to meet Harvard president Charles Eliot who gave
him a job as janitor in the chemistry lab, “the best janitor we ever had” said
a professor. He went on to
become the chief pharmacist at MGH. When X-rays were
discovered he built his own machine and soon was the “radiology consultant” for
the entire hospital. Only then did he go for his MD degree. But his hands had
suffered since 1897 - skin grafts and partial finger amputations. When he finally
passed away in 1916 of carcinoma he had undergone over 50 operations under
ether.
Walter James Dodd (www.archives.org) |
Briefly mentioned is Frederick Henry Baetjer, a student of Osler and the
first radiologist at Johns Hopkins. He submitted to over 100 surgical procedures
since the onset of the first dermatitis. There were many others, recognized by
Percy Brown as “martyrs to science” in a book.[iv]
At least a decade passed before the full dangers of X-rays were appreciated by
the larger community.
Elizabeth Fleischman, San
Francisco’s first “radiographer”, while blazing new trails met a tragic end that was all too common.
[i] San
Francisco Chronicle, June 8, 1900.
[ii] Borden, W
C. The Use of Roentgen Rays in the
Medical Department of the U S Army in the War with Spain. U.S. Govt
Printing Office, 1900.
[iii] Trans. Amer Roentgen Ray Soc. 1908,
p155-6.
[iv] Brown,
Percy. American Martyrs to Science
Through the Roentgen Rays. 1936.
Other sources:
Kevles, B
H. Naked to the Bone: Medical Imaging in
the Twentieth Century. 1997.
Macy, J. Walter James Dodd – A Biographical Sketch.
1918.
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