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Mr. Hart announced the program to be followed during the few hours that the Liberty Bell would be in our city. He stated that when the Liberty Bell comes here the flag of Louisiana would be unfolded to the breeze on Independence Hall in Philadelphia.

The meeting then adjourned.

G. KOPPEL.

DECEMBER MEETING, 1915.

The Louisiana Historical Society met on Wednesday night December 15th in the Cabildo, the President in the chair. There was only a fair attendance of members, a regrettable circumstance as the programme offered was of more than usual interest.

Mr. John Dymond, acting in the absence of Mr. W. O. Hart, offered six candidates for membership:

All were elected.

The Secretary made the point that names presented for membership should be accompanied by their addresses, to prevent duplication and confusion.

Mr. T. P. Thompson called the attention of the Society to a statuette in the Hall offered by the widow of Mr. Chas. A. Lopez, the sculptor, as a model for the Society's proposed monument to Bienville. No action was taken on the subject.

Mrs. M. R. Bankston on behalf of the Daughters of 17761812, brought forward the subject of a public reception for the Illinois delegation, who had been instructed by the State of Illinois with the pleasing duty of handing over to the City of New Orleans the flag made by the women of New Orleans and presented to General Jackson in 1814. The flag had come into possession of an Illinois regiment at the Battle of Black River Bridge during the Civil War. The Illinois Legislature, by special action, authorized its return to its proper guardians. Mr. Cusachs remarked that the old flag

of 1812 had multiplied in the course of time. He had recently received a letter from a gentleman in CaliforniaMr. E. Curtis-stating that he had seen the original 1812 flag made by the ladies exposed in some collection there. Mr. Cusachs had himself purchased from old Jordan the body servant of Gen. Jackson and drummer boy in the battle what he supposed was the original and only flag made by the ladies. The one to be returned from Illinois was third candidate for the honor of figuring as the precious relic.

Dr. Edmond Souchon was then introduced, although he needed no introduction, to a New Orleans audience. He read a carefully prepared paper on the "Original Contributions of Louisiana to Medical Science," one of the most important and carefully prepared documents ever presented to the Society; itself a very original contribution to the historical and literary annals of the Society. The members listened with intense interest and manifested, by prompt applause and an enthusiastic vote of thanks, their appreciation of the high value of Dr. Souchon's compendium.

The Society received from Mr. Wm. Morgan Hannon his book on the "Photo Drama, Its Place Among the Fine Arts," Mr. Hannon was thanked for his courteous attention. Meeting then adjourned.

ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTIONS OF LOUISIANA TO MEDICAL SCIENCES.

By Dr. Edmond Souchon, Professor Emeritus of Anatomy, Tulane School of Medicine; read at the Meeting of the Louisiana Historical Society on December 15, 1915.

A BIOGRAPHIC STUDY.

By original contributions is meant something new that has never been done before by somebody else.

It is physically utterly impossible for people engaged in the prosaic money-getting pursuits to realize, even faintly, the tremendous significance that the intellectuals—that is, those engaged in the sciences, literature and the arts, attach to the word original. To have done something original, ever so little, is to them the supremest achievement. They feel as if by creating something new they are singled by the finger of God from the common herd and lifted up by the great Creator himself, to be one of the anointed. Thousands of wretched deluded mortals have suffered eternal poverty in the mad hope to attain this goal, ever vanishing to so many of them like the mirage in the desert. Worse than all, many have inflicted pitilessly the most cruel privations in that attempt, upon those they should love the most, their wives and children.

The supreme and lofty contempt of the often dirty, hirsute creatures, oddly clad, shown by the ordinary money people is something stupendous.

For some time past I have been devoting much time to the study of Original Contributions of America to Medical Sciences. I was exceedingly happy and proud to find that Louisiana, with twenty-nine original contributors comes on a par with the great old populous cultured city of Boston which presents also twenty-nine original contributors.

All the contributors belong to the City with but one exception, that of Dr. Francois Prevost of Donaldsonville, who was the first to perform Cesarean Section in America in

about 1830. Cesarean Section is an operation consisting in cutting through the belly and the womb to remove a child when the natural passages are obstructed. He operated four times successfully, losing but one mother, and operating twice on the same woman.

In the New Orleans Medical and Surgical Journal of June, 1879, page 933 is a record of Cesarean operations that have been performed in the State of Louisiana during the present century, by Dr. Robert P. Harris of Philadelphia. Dr. Harris says:

As the State of Louisiana has the honor, so far as it is possible to ascertain, to have been the pioneer in Cesarean Section in the United States, so also is she to be credited with the largest number of operations, and the longest record of successes, of any of the States. In fact, after a laborious search covering some ten years, by which the number of cases recorded has been more than doubled, I have reason for believing that in no section has there been a larger proportion of the lives saved. Nine cases are all that were published in the medical journals of our country, as having been operated upon in the State; and of these but one was fatal to the mother, although four of the children perished.

At present we have no record earlier than that of Dr. Francois Prevost, who was born at Pont-de-Ce, in the South of France, about the year 1764; graduated in medicine at Paris; settled in San Domingo; was driven out during the insurrection; escaped to Louisiana, and spent the balance of his days at Donaldsonville, where he died in 1842 at the age of 78. How early in his career in Louisiana, he performed the operation of Cesarean Section, I know not, but do know that he was at last credited with the four cases I have given him. As he was a bold operator, and was 67 years old when he operated on the fourth case, it is probable that he may have had others prior to the first on our record, for he was engaged in an active practice for more than thirty years, in a district in which rickets was not uncommon as

a case of dystocia. Dr. Prevost pointed out to Dr. Cottam, a boy 6 or 7 years old as one of the results of his Cesarean deliveries.

Dr. Thomas Cottam, now of New York, became the successor in practice of Dr. Prevost, in 1832, and fell heir to his books and instruments at his death ten years later. In letters received from him in March and April, 1878, says Dr. Harris, and at a subsequent personal interview, I obtained the accounts of Prevost's cases. Dr. Cottam stated that there could be no question as to the performance of the two operations on the same woman, with safety to herself and children. Dr. Prevost being an old man when Dr. C. first met him, and of a peculiarly reticent nature, will account for the latter not having been fully informed upon the Cesarean cases of the former. In one case (1831) Dr. Francois Prevost operated on a woman, a black, a slave of Madame Cadet Marous, aged about 28 or 29, named Caroline Bellau or Bellak, in second labor; the first child, a male, having been delivered, as nearly as can be ascertained, by craniotomy and evisceration. Dr. Prevost made his incision in the left side of the abdomen, and removed a female child, that lived, grew up, married, and was residing a few years ago in New Orleans. The child was a mulatto, and Dr. Prevost gave it the name of Cesarine, and stipulated with Madame Marous that if it lived it should have its freedom, which was acceded to and subsequently given.

Caroline made a good recovery, as the operation was elective, and performed in good season, and lived until Cesarine was nearly grown up. Dr. Cottam first saw them both in 1832, and examined the cicatrix of the former. The mother is described by some of her contemporaries as "a rather stout, black woman, who carried herself erect."

A curious plantation rumor was started about this woman, at the time of the operation or soon afterwards, to the effect that she had been operated upon in the same way some six or seven times; and this was found to be still credited a year ago among some of the old quondam slaves

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