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Medicine People

Nancy Conn and the 1970 Edinburgh Typhoid Outbreak

Summer 1970: a rare form of typhoid is infecting people in Edinburgh. Dr Nancy Conn, a bacteriologist at Western General, finds the source and prevents a major outbreak with detective work and sanitary towels.

Dr Conn in 1987. Photo taken by Dr Elizabeth F. Sears and used with permission from Dr Charles Sears.

Dr Nancy Conn is one of Scotland’s unsung women in STEM. I try to tell her story here.

Typhoid was and is uncommon in Scotland. Apart from an outbreak in Aberdeen in the 60s, most cases are linked to overseas travel. The Edinburgh outbreak was different. It was mainly children who were being infected, from different parts of the city.

None of them had ever been abroad and none had any link to India, where this rare strain of the Salmonella typhi bacterium comes from. Dr Conn sat with the patients and interviewed them in detail. Many were senseless with fever. She interviewed their friends and families too.

Only one thing seemed to link them– they had all played, fished, or picnicked at the Water of Leith–some had drunk the water. Dr Conn mapped out where the patients had been, but it covered a sizable stretch of a fairly polluted river.

Leith Water in the 1980s. https://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/heritage-and-retro/heritage/25-photos-showing-leith-it-looked-1980s-regeneration-637369

Dr Conn set out to test the river water across the whole area the children had played. The standard protocol for collecting bacteria, known as Moore swabs, kept failing, got muddy and disintegrated in the fast, dirty river. Dr Conn made her own sturdy replacement samplers.

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The sanitary towels, after being sunk in the river, were taken back to the lab and cultured. Some had collected the bacterium. Just upstream from the first one that came back positive, Dr Conn found a surface water drain outlet. Problem is, typhoid shouldn’t be in rain water.

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The outlet drained rain and surface water from all of the north of Colinton. Dr Conn called the City Engineers. She gave them packs of Dr White’s No. 1 sanitary towels and showed them how to use them. They put them down every drain and manhole north of the river to sample.

Like before in the river, Dr Conn cultured the samples in the lab and narrowed in on the source: one surface water drain that ran by one particular block of houses. The engineers dug up the road to investigate.The number of typhoid cases was rising.

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Sewer pipes are always installed below surface water drains for safety (in case the sewer leaks). When the housing block was built in the 1890s, the position of the pipes was switched, and so got connected up to the wrong outlets by the city.

Dr Conn took samples from the sludge traps of the 12 houses in the block and narrowed the source of the typhoid down to 2 houses (P and Q). To spare the residents embarrassment, she asked all houses to take part in a “survey” and collected samples from everyone.

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The source was a 76 year old woman who lived alone. She had never once been ill. She had never been abroad. She had lived in that house for 13 years. If not for Dr Conn and the faulty drains, she’d never have known she was an asymptomatic carrier of a rare Asiatic typhoid.

The carrier was identified 2 weeks before the last admitted typhoid case thanks to Dr Conn working flat out for 2 months. The carrier got treatment and the sewers were fixed, though they both remained positive for several months. So how did she become a healthy carrier?

Dr Conn interviewed her but, in short, nobody knows. She lived alone for most of her life, except with her father, who was a horse vet in the second Boer War and did travel afterwards. Maybe he was also an asymptomatic carrier of Salmonella typhi K1 and she got it from him?

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Nancy Conn’s quick and methodical investigation stopped the outbreak of typhoid in Edinburgh. Folk stopped drinking from the Water of Leith and eventually the river got cleaned up. This photo is from the 1983 “Operation Riverbank” in Leith.

Operation Riverbank in 1983. https://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/heritage-and-retro/heritage/25-photos-showing-leith-it-looked-1980s-regeneration-637369

Dr Agnes “Nancy” Kirkland Conn retired in 1979 and died in March 2013 aged 93. A Broughty Ferry lass, she went to Dundee High then did history and later medicine at the University of St Andrews. She also played hockey for Scotland.

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POSTSCRIPT: So I said Dr Conn is an unsung hero, but she does appear in Sara Sheridan’s “Where are the Women?”. There is an imagined exhibit at the Glasgow Science detailing her work. Unfortunately, this fictitious installation is the only thing I could find for her.

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Dr Conn in her final year of high school.

References

Dr Conn’s 1972 Journal of Hygiene paper on the outbreak:  https://www.jstor.org/stable/3861420 

Her obituary in the British Medical Journal:  https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.f7263 …and here  https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/edinburghnews-scotsman-uk/obituary.aspx?n=agnes-conn&pid=184693199 …

Andy Arthur (Twitter: @cocteautriplets) IDed the unlabeled map as Colinton for me.

The photos:

1980s Leith:  https://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/heritage-and-retro/heritage/25-photos-showing-leith-it-looked-1980s-regeneration-637369 …

The photos of her as a teenager in the 1930s came from the archives of High School of Dundee.  http://www.archive.highschoolofdundee.org.uk/default.aspx

 And it was in Sara Sheridan’s 2019 book “Where are the Women?” that I first heard about Dr Conn.

For anyone who is a better Wikipedian than I am, I started a wiki page for Dr Conn https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_Conn Please chip in!

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People Uncategorized

Long-distance Wheelbarrowing

In 1886, destitute and disabled, James Gordon pulled a wheelbarrow from Dundee to London and back as a stunt to earn money for his family. He sent money home and updates to the press from every town he stopped in.

Long distance wheelbarrowing became *the* craze for 1887 in Scotland. Gordon himself probably got the idea from the Lyman Potter who walked across America for money in 1878. Gordon had lost three right fingers which made it hard for him to find work.

The nation excitedly followed his progress in the newspapers. He was briefly the most famous Dundonian. You can hear a detailed account of his story (and others from Old Weird Dundee from Erin Farley @aliasmacalias, who does excellent videos about Dundee’s forgotten past.

References

Farley, E. (2020) Leisure and Culture Dundee. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=COIK1ItWMuQ&feature=youtu.be

Illustrated London News. 11th December 1886. pg. 11

Categories
Folklore People

Racewinner by a finger

Three years before after St Columba fought the Loch Ness Monster in 565, he lost a boat race to Lismore against St Moluag. The prize was the rights to set up a monastery on the island. Trailing behind, Moluag cut off his own finger and launched it at the shore, thus winning the race and he was able to build his monastery.

Categories
Disasters People

Stonehaven Skipper’s Silver Watch

Fisherman, William Christie and 3 of his crew were drowned off Stonehaven in Jan. 1885. Their bodies were never found. 3 years later, another fisherman hooked William’s silver watch by a single link in its chain and presented it to William’s widow Christina.

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Stonehaven Harbour, 1890. Source: https://www.stunningstonehaven.co.uk/looking-back-stonehaven-harbour/
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This picture (below) of fisherfolk at Stonehaven was taken about his time. Also here’s the entry for his boat (The Mary) and the crew in the register of deaths at sea. The cause of death is given as “swamping of boat”

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https://canmore.org.uk/collection/1773579
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Entries in the register of deaths at sea for William Christie and the 3 other fisherman who died after the Mary was swamped.
References

Aberdeen Evening Express. 26th January 1885. pg. 4
Aberdeen Evening Express. 18th February 1888. pg. 2
1885 CHRISTIE, WILLIAM (Statutory registers Deaths 022/MR 98)

Categories
Animals People

Savaged by Ostriches

Billie Ritchie (1879-1921) was a Glaswegian actor who built a career on impersonating Charlie Chaplin, though he always claimed that Chaplin stole his act and look. He died after being savaged by ostriches he was mistreating on set.

References

Dundee Evening Telegraph. 4th August 1921. pg. 6

Categories
Medicine People

The Bloodless Surgeon of Blantyre

From 1903 to 1907, Blantyre was known as “Lanarkshire Lourdes” because of the “miracles” of William Rae, a bonesetter. Known as the “Bloodless Surgeon” he saw as many 360 patients a day and once helped 100 children to walk again in 24hrs.

References

Penny Illustrated News. 2nd July 1904. pg. 4.

Categories
People

“Satan” Paterson

Auchenblae drover James “Satan” Paterson (1811-1889) lost his arm in a mill accident when young. He had a large stone tied into his empty sleeve as a “prosthetic”, which he used ferociously when fighting. He was nicknamed “Satan”, as he was unable to feel pain.

References

Mollyson, C.A. (1893) The Parish of Fordoun: Chapters in its History. John Rae Smith, Aberdeen. pp. 126-127

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People

Standing up for Black Scots

Fortunes in Old Weird Scotland were made through black slavery. Many of the figures revered as “canny Scots”, were directly involved in, or complicit in colonialism, oppression, exploitation and subjugation (e.g. Livingstone, Monboddo, Burns). Here are *few* times Scots stood up for black slaves and were united against racism in their communities, not so Scots can pat ourselves on the back, but as examples perhaps worth aspiring to. 

Depiction of the European slave trade by George Morland

David Spens

In 1769, A slave named “Black Tom”, brought to Methil by David Dalrymple, fled to E. Wemyss and was baptized David Spens. A farmer in Methilhill sheltered Spens but Dalrymple had him jailed in Dysart. The local miners, salters, and labourers took up collection for Spens’s bail (£30) and legal fees. Spens was part of their community and they stood up for him.

A letter written from David Spens to David Dalrymple declaring his freedom.

Ned Johnston

Ned Johnston, a black slave brought to Scotland by Archibald Buchanan in the 1760s (Buchanan Street Buchanans) was helped to escape by his local community and given freedom by magistrates in Glasgow. He was badly abused and his community stood up for him.

Buchanan Street, Glasgow. Named for the Buchanan tobacco lords and slave owners.

Tom Jenkins

Tom Jenkins lived in Teviothead having left West Africa on a slaveship in 1803. He attended the village school and taught himself maths, Latin, & Greek in his spare time.

© The Johnnie Armstrong Gallery. Jenkins reading by candlelight in his loft.

At age 17, Tom was recommended as the new parish school teacher, but the racist presbytery refused to appoint him. Clearly the best candidate, his community started a fund for a salary and created an independent school for him to teach in. Between 1814 and 1818 he taught up to 45 pupils at a time in the Teviothead Smiddy. With his salary and donations he took classes at the University of Edinburgh and went to teacher training school in London.

(© The Johnnie Armstrong Gallery) Commemorative lintel depicting Jenkins’s life.

Tom Jenkins was Britain’s first black schoolteacher. His community rallied around him and gave him the support he needed when the system in power denied him it.

Plaque for Jenkins in Teviothead. image: R. Bowen https://blog.historicenvironment.scot/2019/10/tom-jenkins/

Peter Burnet

Peter Burnet, an American runaway slave (but born free in Virginia) came to Paisley and worked as a weaver in the 1780s. Said to be the best dressed man in town, he was well-liked in the weaving community.

Peter was falsely imprisoned after his landlord lied about him owing money. Without work, the weavers, led by the Tannahill family, got him a bed and food and organised his release. The radical weavers looked after their own.

Incidentally, it was Peter who dived into the Candren Burn and retrieved the body of his friend Robert Tannahill after the poet drowned himself in 1810. In 1841, a friend published Peter’s life story so he could support himself in his old age.

“A Sketch of the Life of Peter Burnet”, which went to at least 8 editions, was subtitled “who came to Paisley sixty years ago, where he still lives, a very old and respectable man”. It is well worth a read. Peter Burnet died in 1847 aged 86, an auld Buddy. 

Scots today are taught very little about Scotland’s history in establishing and profiting from black slavery. The modern day legacies of the slave trade also get little attention.

You can sit back and say “it wisnae me” when it comes to racism, or you can stand up for those on the receiving end.

These Old Weird Scotland stories are examples of communities using their privilege to help black Scots.
We maun dae the same the day.

References

Whyte, I. (2006) Scotland and the abolition of Black slavery, 1756-1838, Edinburgh University Press. 278pp.

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People Uncategorized

When RLS gave his birthday away

In 1891, Robert Louis Stevenson gifted “the rights and privileges” of his birthday (13th Nov) to 12 year old Annie Ide of Vermont, who was unlucky enough to be born on Christmas Day.

She left it in her will to her niece, who left it to her granddaughter. Written in faux Scots law legalese, if the “terms” are defaulted on, the birthday becomes the property of the current US president!

Categories
People

David Hatton’s Flute-orum

From the genius that brought you mouse-mills comes a new and exciting musical instrument: THE CHAMBER FLUTE-ORUM Available at all good music shops!