DOWN TO EARTH
The Old Diary
February/March 2000
By Jim Long
A nineteenth-century traveler’s book of cures, many of
them herbal, offers both entertainment and historical
insight.
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Old herbal formulas have interested me since I
was in the fourth grade. I kept dozens of messy notebooks filled
with recipes, formulas, folklore, and ideas that caught my
attention. I read and recorded remedies from old books and
sometimes clipped them from newspapers.
Seven years ago my lifelong friend Marge sent me a newspaper
clipping with a story about a diary that had been given to a museum
by an estate. The article described it as a medical diary and gave
some history of the man who had kept it throughout his life. My
interest was piqued, and I made the three-hour trip to visit with
the museum curator.
The diary had been started by eighteen-year-old Elias Slagle
while he lived in Ohio. I was especially excited about the early
date—1853. The young man had started collecting medical formulas at
the end of the Santa Fe Trail era and before the Civil War began. I
got permission to make a photocopy.
As Slagle traveled across the country, heading west, he avidly
collected medicinal formulas in the towns he visited. For the past
several years I have been studying his collected formulas, which
include few personal notations.
Of the forty or so pages in the diary, at least three-fourths of
the remedies Slagle recorded are herb-based. He has kept the
spelling, or the misspelling, used by the author of each formula.
For example, in his remedy for influenza, a serious illness at that
time, he writes, “Take one ounce of Shugar Candy, 2 ounces Gum
Arabic, 1/2 ounce liquorice. Let them be broken in a mortar, then
dissolved in one pint boiling water. When the mixture is cold add
to it two tablespoons fulls of good Antimonial wine.” He misspells
several words, yet in other places the same words are correctly
spelled. The flu remedy was basically a cough syrup, of little use
beyond easing a sore throat.
I’ve studied the book carefully, getting stuck on the
gentleman’s penmanship, stalling on words I don’t recognize. Many
of those words or terms are long out of use, which has led me to
search through antique bookstores for mid-nineteenth-century texts.
I have collected quite a few ancient out-of-print medical texts,
which I use to research some of the plants and terms that Slagle
refers to. Several of the plant names have changed, and many of the
medical terms have gone out of use.