From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dr James Manby Gully (14 March 1808 – 1883),
was a Victorian medical doctor, well known for practising hydrotherapy, or the
"water cure". Along with his partner James Wilson, he founded a
very successful "hydropathy" (as it was then called) clinic in Malvern, Worcestershire, which
had many notable Victorians, including such figures as Charles Darwin
and Alfred, Lord Tennyson, as
clients.
Gully's clinic using Malvern Water in Great Malvern, and those that followed,
were largely responsible for Malvern's rapid development from a
village to a large town. He is also remembered as a suspect in the
Charles Bravo
poisoning case.
Early
life and education
James Manby Gully was born in Kingston, Jamaica, the son of a
wealthy coffee planter. When he was 6 he was taken to England to attend school in Liverpool, then went on to
the Collège Sainte-Barbe in Paris. He became a medical student
at the University of Edinburgh in
1825, as did Charles Darwin in the same year. After three years at
Edinburgh, Gully became an externe at L'École de Médecine
in Paris, then returned to Edinburgh to take his MD in
1829.[1]
Career
Gully began his practise as a physician in London in 1830, and went on to write and
translate numerous medical books and papers, becoming a fellow of
the Medical and
Chirurgical Society of London and a fellow of the Royal
Physical Society of Edinburgh. He edited the London Medical and
Surgical Journal and the Liverpool Medical
Gazette.[1]
Gully showed an open interest in the dangerously radical idea of transmutation of species, and
translated an evolutionary treatise on Comparative
Physiology by the embryologist Friedrich Tiedemann.[2]
He was continually dissatisfied with the medical treatments of
the time, and in 1837 met Dr.James Wilson who then spent some time
on the continent, and had returned enthused with the idea of hydrotherapy. Dr
Wilson was one of the few Englishmen who stayed at the hydropathic
establishment of Vincent
Priessnitz, at Gräfenberg before Captain
R.T. Claridge, whose name became synonymous with hydropathy due
to his 1842 book Hydropathy; or The Cold Water Cure, as
practiced by Vincent Priessnitz... and his lecture tours.[3][4][5]
While acknowledging that Claridge did much to promote hydrotherapy,
Wilson states that "I had been a considerable time at Grafenberg",
and that Claridge "came to Graefenberg some time after I had been
there".[6]
One writer states Wilson was at Grafenberg for 10 months.[7][8]
Nevertheless, in an earlier 1842 publication, Wilson acknowledged
having read Claridge's work, and unconditionally praised his
"enthusiastic" promotion of hydropathy.[9]
Gully and Wilson set up a partnership and opened a "water cure"
clinic at Malvern offering a regimen
similar to that at Priessnitz's Gräfenberg clinic.[9]
In 1843, Wilson and Gully published a comparison of the efficacy of
the water-cure with drug treatments, including accounts of some
cases treated at Malvern, combined with a prospectus of their Water
Cure Establishment.[1][10]
Then in 1846 Gully published The Water Cure in Chronic
Disease, further describing the treatments available at the
clinic.[11]
In 1848, Gully became a member of the British Homoeopathic
Society.[12]
The fame of the water-cure establishment grew, and Gully and
Wilson became well-known national figures. Two more clinics were
opened at Malvern.[13]
Famous patients included Charles Darwin, Charles
Dickens, Thomas Carlyle, Florence
Nightingale, Lord Tennyson and Samuel
Wilberforce.[1]
With his fame he also attracted criticism: Sir Charles Hastings, a physician and
founder of the British Medical
Association, was a forthright critic of hydropathy, and Dr
Gully in particular.[14]
The
Water Cure treatment
Dr. Gully's patients at Malvern were woken at 5 am, undressed
and wrapped in wet sheets then covered with blankets. An hour of
later buckets of water were thrown upon the patients who then went
on a five mile walk, carrying an alpenstock and a Gräfenberg flask of mineral water,
stopping at wells for the waters. They returned to the Malvern pump
room for a breakfast of dry biscuits and water. They then had the
day to spend bathing in a range of kinds of baths, or in some cases
wore a wet sheet called the "Neptune Girdle" round their middle at
all times, removing it only at meal times. Dinner which was always
boiled mutton and fish was followed by a few hours in a dry bed.
The exercise, plain food and absence of alcohol together with the
congenial company of other wealthy patrons proved generally
beneficial.[1]
Charles
Darwin
Charles
Darwin suffered repeated episodes of illness involving stomach
pains from 1838 onwards, and had no success with conventional
treatments. In 1849 after about four months of incessant vomiting
he followed the recommendation of his friend Captain Sulivan
and cousin Fox, and after reading Gully's book
rented a villa at Malvern for his family and started a two month
trial of the treatment on 10 March. Gully agreed with Darwin's self
diagnosis of nervous dyspepsia, and set him a routine including
being heated by a spirit lamp until dripping with perspiration,
then vigorous rubbing with cold wet towels and cold foot baths, a
strict diet, and walks. Darwin enjoyed the attention and the
demanding regime which left him no time to feel guilty about not
working. His health improved rapidly and he felt that the
water-cure was "no quackery".[15][16]
He had no faith in the homœopathic medicines Gully gave him three
times a day, but took them obediently.[17]
They stayed on until 30 June, and at home he continued with the
diet, and with the water treatment aided by his butler.[18]
When his sickness returned in September Darwin had a day visit
to Malvern, then recuperated at home. In June 1850 after losing
time to illness (without vomiting) he spent a week at Malvern.[19] Later
that year he wrote to Fox about the credulity of his "beloved Dr
Gully" whose daughter had been ill, and had treated her with a clairvoyant girl to
report on internal changes, a mesmerist to put her to
sleep, John Chapman as homœopathist
and himself as hydropathist, after which Gully's daughter
recovered. Darwin explained to Fox his wrathful scepticism about
clairvoyance and homeopathy.[20] When
Darwin's own young daughter Annie had persistent indigestion he
confidently took her to Gully on 24 March 1851, and after a week
left her there to take the cure, but a fortnight later was recalled
by Dr Gully as Annie had bilious fever. Dr. Gully was attentive and
repeatedly reassured them that she was recovering, but after a
series of crises Annie died on 23 April. Gully gave the cause of
death as a "Bilious fever with typhoid character".[21][22]
Darwin kept records of the effects of the continuing water
treatment at home, and in 1852 stopped the regime, having found
that it was of some help with relaxation but overall had no
significant effect, indicating that it served only to decrease his
psychosomatic symptomatology.[23][24] In
1855 Darwin wrote to a friend that "Dr. Gully did me much
good",[25] but
he did not want to return to Malvern. When his illness returned
much as when he had first seen Gully he found a new hydrotherapist,
Dr. Lane, whose more relaxed regime did not include clairvoyance,
mesmerism or homeopathy. After a similarly speedy recovery Darwin
became a complete convert.[26][27] In
1863 his illness worsened seriously at a time when Lane was not
available, and Emma Darwin persuaded her husband to return to
Gully. His cousin Fox had told him that Gully had suffered a mental
breakdown and was unavailable.[28] In
his reply Darwin had mentioned having had eczema, and wrote "Gully
will be a great loss & I hardly know whom to consult there. I
must be under some experienced man, for I could not stand much hard
treatment."[29] They
arrived at Malvern on 2 September, but Darwin felt that he was
being fobbed off with the supervising physician, Dr. Ayerst. Emma
arranged for Dr. Gully to attend and endorse Ayerst's treatment,
but by then the eczema was too raw to bear any water. Darwin had a
complete breakdown, and on 13 October left the spa worse than when
he'd arrived. His serious illness continued until the Spring of
1866.[30]
Beliefs and
causes
Gully was an articulate and popular public speaker and writer.
He was also a firm believer in a number of women's causes. He
advocated women's suffrage, and preached temperance, due to the detrimental
affects of alcohol on the husbands of many Victorian women. Gully
separated the sexes strictly at his clinics, as he believed that
many female psychological complaints (depression, anxiety,
hypochondria, hysteria) were due to the pressures Victorian women
were under to be chaste, ambitionless, efficient, selfless givers,
at the expense of their own mental well-being.
While Gully believed in the value of homeopathic medicines in some cases, adding
a footnote about his positive experiences with homeopathy to later
editions of his water-cure book and stating that "It is well and
wise to observe and investigate these things before laughing at
them”,[31] he
seems to have regarded the use of homeopathic remedies as an
adjunct to his use of hydrotherapy,[32] and
does not appear to have agreed with the fundamental principles of
homeopathy, writing in 1861, "It may shock the homœopathic world
when I say that I never much cared for the doctrine of "like curing
like"; and that I do not believe it to be of the universal
application that they suppose".[33] Like
many of his educated contemporaries both in the UK, [34] and
in the USA[35] Gully
showed an interest in several popular movements of the day, such as
women's
suffrage, mesmerism and diagnostic clairvoyance,[36] and
in later life he came to believe in spiritualism.[37]
Affair with Florence
Bravo
In 1872, he met a young woman named Florence Ricardo (later Florence Bravo).
They became secret lovers. The following year, after travelling
with Gully to Kissingen in Germany, Florence became pregnant. Gully
performed an abortion.Thereafter, their relationship became purely
Platonic.
Florence subsequently met and fell in love with Charles Bravo, whom
she married in 1875. On hearing the news from a third party, Gully
reportedly tore the letter to shreds. Just a few short months
later, on April 18, 1876, Charles Bravo died of poisoning. The
culprit was never discovered; Gully was a suspect, along with
Florence herself, but although he testified at the inquest, nothing
further came of the case. In 1923, Sir Harry Poland QC, who was
involved for the crown in the case, stated that "Dr. Gully was in
no way implicated".[1]
Published
works
- A systematic treatise on comparative physiology,
introductory to the Physiology of man. Vol. I / [Friedrich
Tiedemann]; translated, with notes, from the German, James
Manby Gully and J. Hunter Lane, 1834
- Gully, James Manby (M.D.) (1835).
Formulary for the Preparation
and Employment of Several New Remedies, such as morphine codeine,
prussic acid, strychnine, veratrine, hydrocyanic ether, sulphate of
quinine (etc) ".". Translated from the (French) 8th edition
of The Formulaire of M. Magendie. With an Appendix by Charles
Wilson Gregory, M.D. (Translator). http://www.archive.org/details/aformularyforpr01gullgoog
Formulary for the Preparation and Employment of Several New
Remedies, such as morphine codeine, prussic acid, strychnine,
veratrine, hydrocyanic ether, sulphate of quinine (etc). Retrieved
2009-11-04.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org). The following edition is also
available online:
- Lectures on the moral and physical attributes of men of
genius and talent, James Manby Gully, 1836
- Gully (M.D.), James Manby (1837).
An exposition of the
symptoms, essential nature, and treatment of neuropathy, or
nervousness. London: John Churchill. http://www.archive.org/details/anexpositionsym00gullgoog. Retrieved
2009-11-04.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org)
- Gully, James M (1842). The simple treatment of
disease deduced from the methods of expectancy and
revulsion. London: John Churchill.
http://www.archive.org/details/simpletreatment00gullgoog. Retrieved
2009-11-04.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org)
- Wilson (M.D.), James; & James
M. Gully (M.D.) (1843). The Dangers of the Water
Cure, and its Efficacy Examined and Compared with those of the Drug
Treatment of Diseases; and an Explanation of its Principles and
Practice; with an account of Cases Treated at Malvern, and a
Prospectus of the Water Cure Establishment at That Place.
London: Cunningham & Mortimer. http://www.archive.org/details/dangerswatercur00gullgoog. Retrieved
2009-11-02.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org)
- Gully, James Manby (1850. First
published 1846). The Water-Cure in Chronic
Disease; An Exposition of the causes, progress, and termination of
various chronic diseases of the digestive organs, lungs, nerves,
limbs, and skin; and of their treatment by water, and other
hygienic means (3rd ed.). London: John Churchill. http://www.archive.org/details/watercureinchro03gullgoog. Retrieved
2009-11-03.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org). Richard Metcalfe lists the
publication dates of this book as: 1846 (1st ed), 1847 (2nd ed),
1850 (3rd ed), 1851 (4th ed), 1856 (5th ed), 1859 (6th ed).[38]
The following editions are also available online:
- A guide to domestic hydro-therapeia: the water cure in
acute disease, James Manby Gully, 1869[39]
- Drawings descriptive of spirit life and progress. By a
child twelve years of age, ed. James Manby Gully, 1874
Notes
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
Swinton, William E The hydrotherapy and
infamy of Dr James Gully, 1980, Canadian Medical
Association Journal. Retrieved on 2008-01-14.
- ^
Desmond & Moore 1991,
p. 219
- ^ Claridge, Capt. R.T. (1842). Hydropathy; or The Cold
Water Cure, as practiced by Vincent Priessnitz, at Grafenberg,
Silesia, Austria. (3rd ed.). London: James Madden and
Co. http://www.archive.org/details/hydropathyorcol01clargoog. Retrieved
2009-10-29.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org)
- ^ Durie, Dr Alastair (Paper given on Tuesday
27th November 2001). "Almost twins by birth: Hydropathy, temperance and
the Scottish churches 1840-1914". The Scottish Church History
Society. http://www.schs.org.uk/samplepaper.htm. Retrieved
2009-10-29.
- ^ Beirne, Peter. The Ennis Turkish Baths
1869 – 1878. County Cork Library. p. see note 11. http://www.clarelibrary.ie/eolas/coclare/history/ennis_turkish_baths_article.htm. Retrieved
2009-10-30.
Originally
published in The Other Clare vol. 32 (2008) pp 12-17
- ^ Wilson, M.D., James; & James M. Gully,
M.D. (1843). "A Prospectus of the Water
Cure Establishment at Malvern, Under the professional management of
James Wilson, M.D., & James M. Gully, M.D.". in The
Dangers of the Water Cure, and its Efficacy Examined and Compared
with those of the Drug Treatment of Diseases; and an Explanation of
its Principles and Practice; with an account of Cases Treated at
Malvern, and a Prospectus of the Water Cure Establishment at That
Place. London: Cunningham & Mortimer. pp. 9-10
(n223-n224 in online page field). http://www.archive.org/details/dangerswatercur00gullgoog. Retrieved
2009-11-02.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org) Note: the prospectus is at the back
of the book, with its own preface by Wilson, and its own new
pagination
- ^ Bulwer (April 1863). "Bulwer's Letter on
Water-Cure". in R.T. Trall (ed.). The Herald of Health, and
The Water-cure journal (see title page of January edition,
p.5). vol.35-36. New York: R.T. Trall &
Co. pp. 149-154 (see p.151). http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015066610265;q1=captain;start=1;size=100;page=root;view=image;seq=141;num=149. Retrieved 26 November
2009.
- ^ Lord Lytton
(Published posthumously, 1875). "Confessions of a
Water-Patient (the 'Bulwer' letter)". in Pamphlets and
Sketches (Knebworth ed.). London: George
Routledge and Sons. pp. 49-75. http://www.archive.org/details/pamphletsandsket00lyttuoft. Retrieved November 28
2009.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org)
- ^ a
b
Wilson, James (1842). The Water-Cure. A
Practical Treatise on the Cure of Diseases by Water, Air, Exercise,
and Diet: being a New Mode of restoring Injured Constitutions to
Robust Health, for the Radical Cure of Dyspeptic, Nervous, and
Liver Complaints, Tic-Douloureux, Gout, and Rheumatism, Scrofula,
Syphilis, and their Consequences, Diseases Peculiar to Women and
Children, Fevers, Inflammations (4th ed.). London: John
Churchill. p. xxvi. http://www.archive.org/details/watercureapract00wilsgoog. Retrieved
2009-11-04.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org)
- ^ Wilson, M.D., James; & James M. Gully,
M.D. (1843). in The Dangers of the
Water Cure, and its Efficacy Examined and Compared with those of
the Drug Treatment of Diseases; and an Explanation of its
Principles and Practice; with an account of Cases Treated at
Malvern, and a Prospectus of the Water Cure Establishment at That
Place. London: Cunningham & Mortimer. http://www.archive.org/details/dangerswatercur00gullgoog. Retrieved
2009-11-02.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org)
- ^ Gully, James Manby (1850. First published
1846). The Water-Cure in Chronic
Disease; An Exposition of the causes, progress, and termination of
various chronic diseases of the digestive organs, lungs, nerves,
limbs, and skin; and of their treatment by water, and other
hygienic means (3rd ed.). London: John Churchill. http://www.archive.org/details/watercureinchro03gullgoog. Retrieved
2009-11-03.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org)
- ^
Adkin, George (ed.). The British and foreign
homœopathic medical directory and record, 1853, Taubman
Medical Library. Retrieved on 2008-01-11.
- ^
http://www.malvernhealth.org.uk/about.html
History of Water Cures at malvern
- ^
Bradley, J., and Depree, M. A Shadow of Orthodoxy? An Epistemology
of British Hydropathy, 1840–1858, Medical History, 2003,
47:173–194
- ^
Browne 1995, p. 494-496
- ^ Letter 1236 — Darwin, C. R.
to Hooker, J. D., 28 Mar 1849. DarwinProject.ac.uk. Retrieved
on 2007-01-15.
- ^ Letter 1234 — Darwin, C. R.
to Darwin, S. E., 19 Mar 1849. DarwinProject.ac.uk. Retrieved
on 2008-01-11.
- ^
Browne 1995, p. 496-497
- ^
Desmond & Moore 1991,
p. 367, 373
- ^
Letter 1352 — Darwin, C. R.
to Fox, W. D., 4 Sept 1850. DarwinProject.ac.uk. Retrieved on
2008-01-11.
- ^
Browne 1995, p. 499-501
- ^
Desmond & Moore 1991,
p. 379-384
- ^
Jensen G., Charles Darwin's calamitous
psychosomatic disorder clarified, Journal of Psychosomatic
Research, Volume 55, Number 2, August 2003 , pp. 133-133(1).
- ^
Smith, F. et al. "Darwin's illness". Lancet 1990;336:
1139-1140
- ^
Darwin, Charles; Frederick Burkhardt, Sydney Smith (1865). The Correspondence of Charles
Darwin. Cambridge University Press
13, p.379.
- ^
Browne 2002, p. 64
- ^
Desmond & Moore 1991,
p. 453-454
- ^
"Darwin Correspondence
Project - Letter 4178 — Fox, W. D. to Darwin, C. R., [16–22 May
1863"]. http://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/darwinletters/calendar/entry-4178.html#mark-4178.f5. Retrieved
2008-03-09.
- ^
"Darwin Correspondence
Project - Letter 4181 — Darwin, C. R. to Fox, W. D., 23 May
[1863"]. http://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/darwinletters/calendar/entry-4181.html#back-mark-4181.f4. Retrieved
2008-03-09.
- ^
Browne 2002, p. 228-229
- ^
Gully, James Manby: The water cure in chronic
disease, 5th ed. London: John Churchill, 1856. Excerpt in
Google Book Search. Retrieved on 2007-01-15
- ^
Letter 1234 — Darwin, C. R.
to Darwin, S. E., 19 Mar 1849, footnote 5. DarwinProject.ac.uk.
Retrieved on 2008-07-09.
- ^
Gully, J.M. (1861):
Homoeopathy and Hydropathy at Malvern, British Medical Journal,
Nov. 16, 1861
- ^
Paul Vallely, Women's suffrage movement: The story of Kate
Harvey, The Independent, 24 November 2005 [1]
- ^
Suzanne Keen, Other Powers: The Age of Suffrage, Spiritualism,
and the Scandalous Victoria Woodhull (Book Review),
Commonweal, Sept 11, 1998 [2]
- ^
Quammen, D: The Kiwi’s Egg: Charles Darwin and Natural
Selection, London: Weidenfield & Nicolson, 2007, p.
111.
- ^
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2004, Vol. 24 p. 228.
- ^ Metcalfe, Richard (1898). Life of Vincent
Priessnitz, Founder of Hydropathy. London: Simpkin,
Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co., Ltd. p. 198. http://www.archive.org/stream/lifeofvincentpri00metciala#page/n5/mode/2up. Retrieved 3 December
2009.
Full text at
Internet Archive (archive.org)
- ^
Archived Collections: Gully,
James Manby, 1808-1883. London: Wellcome Library. Retrieved on
2007-01-15.
Further
reading
- Death at the Priory: Love, Sex, and Murder in Victorian
England by James Ruddick; Atlantic Books, 2002
- Dr. Gully's Story by Elizabeth Jenkins; Coward,
McCann, Geoghegan, Inc, 1972
- How Charles Bravo Died by Yseult Bridges; Macmillan
and Co., Ltd., 1956, 1970.
- Lewis and Lewis: The Life and times of a Victorian
Solicitor by John Juxon; Ticknor & Fields, 1983, 1984.
(Chapter 12: "The Torturer", p. 115-139.)
- Six Criminal Women by Elizabeth Jenkins; Sampson Low,
1949, 1951. (Chapter VI: "The Balham Mystery", p. 177-224.)
- Suddenly at the Priory by John Williams; Penguin
Books, 1957, 1989.
References
- Browne, E. Janet
(1995), Charles Darwin: vol. 1 Voyaging, London: Jonathan
Cape, ISBN
1-84413-314-1
- Browne, E. Janet
(2002), Charles Darwin: vol. 2 The Power of Place, London:
Jonathan Cape, ISBN
0-7126-6837-3
- Desmond,
Adrian; Moore, James (1991),
Darwin, London: Michael Joseph, Penguin Group, ISBN
0718134303
External
links