Pages

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Madstones in the 1800s by Bea Tifton


Those living in the frontier feared rabies and the excruciating death it could cause. One way of cheating this horrible illness of its victim was through the use of madstones. 

Before madstones there were bezoars. A bezoar is a lump of stone-like material that forms when calcium and magnesium phosphate build up around plant fibers, hair, or a pebble, much like a stone hairball, in the digestive track of a ruminant such as a camel, an ox, an antelope, a goat, or a llama.  The stomach contracts and smooths the bezoar into a round shape. The word “bezoar” is derived from pad-zahr, a word that means “anecdote” in Persian.  The bezoars were thought to cure poison, leprosy, measles, cholera, and depression.  Arabian doctors began using bezoars in the 8th century. In the 12th century, they were introduced to western medicine as a cure for poisoning, and monarchs were very interested in them as that was a common means of assassination. Queen Elizabeth I had a bezoar set into a silver ring.



Pioneers who contracted rabies could expect to experience flu like symptoms, followed by anxiety, confusion, and agitation. The unfortunate victim would go on to experience hallucinations, hydrophobia, and insomnia. When these symptoms appeared, the disease was almost always fatal.

 Pioneers obtained madstones from the stomachs of deer or cows. Some users maintained that there were rules regarding the madstones. They must never be bought or sold. The shape must not be altered (so no silver rings). The patient must seek the madstone, as opposed to the madstone being brought to a patient. The owner of the madstone should not charge for its use. It was generally passed down through families, especially from father to son.

 When the madstone was obtained, it was boiled in milk, then applied directly to the bleeding wound. If there was the presence of rabies in the wound, the madstone would stick to the bite wound.  When the stone fell off the wound, the madstone was boiled in milk again until the milk turned green, signifying that the rabies was out of the stone.  The stone was reapplied to the wound and the process repeated until the stone no longer stuck to the wound. Then, the patient would not get rabies. Madstones are porous so they could stick for hours.


In Forgotten Tales of Texas, Clay Coppedge writes that that some doctors on the frontier actually carried one or two madstones. One such doctor was Benjamin Tomas Crumley, who was half Cherokee. Crumley studied traditional herbal medicine with the tribal elders and also attended a Parisian medical school. His use of madstones reportedly had a high success rate. 

When Warren Angus Ferris, a pioneer surveyor who plotted out a settlement called Warwick that was later renamed Dallas, was bitten in the leg by a rabid raccoon, he borrowed a madstone from a neighbor posthaste. Ferris later recorded the experience in his diary. “The evaporating water could be seen as it was boiling at every tube, and I could feel a distinct burning sensation in the wound such as I would presume would be induced by a minute blister of flies.” (Forgotten Tales of Texas, Coppedge) He never did come down with rabies.
 


McPhail Madstone of Houston County


How did the madstones work? No one knows. Perhaps some people wouldn’t have died, anyway. A person bitten in the head or the face by a rabid animal has a 90% chance of getting rabies. A person bitten on the bare arm or leg has a 40% chance, but a person bitten through clothing only has a 10% chance. Often the seeker of the madstone may not have been sure if the animal who bit him really was rabid. “On the frontier, where rabid animals outnumbered doctors, people didn’t take any chances.” (Coppedge, Forgotten Tales of Texas.)  By the 20th century, the madstone was mostly relegated to folklore.  



Sources:
Coppedge, Clay. Forgotten Tales of Texas.
Fick, Lorraine. “The Magical Medicine of Bezoars.”
Muncrief, Dennis. “The Madstone: Truth or Myth.”

 

4 comments:

  1. Wow, I'd never heard of a madstone. This information will show up in one of my books. Thanks for sharing !

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Great! Glad you thought it was useful. Thanks for your comment.

      Delete
    2. I’ve heard of Maidstones all my life and they fact they changed color with the poison- I still wonder if they work 🤔

      Delete
  2. I heard about Maidstones all my life- growing up country-but has no idea of origin

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for visiting Sweethearts of the West! We are very sad to require comment moderation now due to the actions of a few spam comments. Thank you for your patience.