George Rogers Clark, writing in
1791 about his journey, with John Gabriel Jones, from Harrods Town,
Kentucky to Williamsburg, Virginia; on June 6, 1776, told of how on the third
day of their journey one of their horses gave out and they were forced to share
the remaining horse. Due to the constant
rain, their feet continuously wet, and they developed what he called “scald
feet”.1
During
the late 18th and early 19th centuries on the Old
Northwest Frontier of North America, “scald feet”, “scald foot”
or “scalded feet”, was a common affliction2,
experienced by many scouts, rangers, hunters, and travelers through the
wilderness areas of the Old Northwest Frontier.
What
exactly was this ailment and what would a modern doctor call it today. How did they prevent and treat it during the
late 18th and early 19th centuries, and how do they treat
it today? It is a medical mystery and as the great Sherlock Holmes would
have said “The game is afoot”!
The clues at the scene of
the crime...
A
careful reading of George
Rogers Clark’s journal, pages 210 to 2012, with the important passages shown
above, gives us some clues as to what this “Shocking Complaint”, George
Roger Clark’s case of scalded feet might be.
and stated that their feet were constantly wet for three to four days, 72 to 96 hours, at which point they developed “scald feet”. They travelled another two days, 48 hours “in greater torment than I ever before or since Experienced”.
alerting Native American hunting or war parties to their presence, due to ongoing hostilities with the Native Americans, particularly the Shawnee.
feet felt too hot, and it became too painful to walk through the woods.
few days, if they used “oil and ouse (ooze) made of oak Bark”. On the sixth day, they were able to find a shelter, build a fire to warm themselves, dry their clothes and care for their feet, by washing them with oak ooze and rubbing them with oil.
George
Rogers Clark didn’t mention the exact temperatures he and his companion experienced
on his journey through Kentucky, but we can look at today’s temperatures and
get an idea of what the historical temperatures would have been during early June
1776.
From Weatherspark.com, HERE.
A review of the historical
record...
So,
are there any clues hidden in the historical record, that will help us solve
this mystery?
Lyman
C. Draper, an early 19th century chronicler of the Old Northwest Frontier and Daniel Boone, wrote
that “His feet getting scaldeddd, in frontier parlance, by
heat in walking, he peeled some oak bark, jammed it into an ooze with which he
rubbed his feet...owing to the soreness of his feet, he did not make so good
progress... Ted Franklin Belue, the
editor of the Life of Daniel Boone, further explained that “dd‘Scalded’ feet meant one’s
foot soles had stayed wet for so long that the many-layered, shriveled flesh
peeled off in thick hunks that tore deeply into the tender sole”3.
During
the late 18th and early 19th centuries, according to
Doddridge, an early chronicler, moccasins were considered in wet weather to only
be a “decent way of going barefoot”4, because
the spongy, pliable, porous nature of buckskin, moccasins would not keep your
feet dry in wet conditions.
In his journal, George
Rogers Clark didn’t specifically mention if he and his companion were wearing
moccasins or shoes, though it is likely that they were wearing moccasins, since
moccasins were easier to repair in the wilderness than shoes were. However, whether they were wearing buckskin
moccasins or leather shoes, because of the wet and rain, their feet would have
been continuously wet since the start of their journey.
Scalded Feet...Rheumatism?
It
appears that doctors, chroniclers, and sufferers of scalded feet, during the
late 18th and early 19th centuries, all thought that
scalded feet was some type of chronic rheumatism or gout5.
So, just as in the case of George Rogers Clark and his scalded feet, “rheumatism” was thought to brought on “wet feet, wet clothes, &c.” and “damp weather” and shared the symptoms of swelling, feelings of heat without a fever, and a “pain of an acuteness surpassing description” with scalded feet. Doctors of the time felt that it could be avoided or cured by keeping “the feet dry and warm, and avoiding as much as possible, every exposure to evening air or damp weather”.
C0mmon
sense tips to avoid scalded feet.
Because
of the impossibility of keeping your feet warm and dry, while you traversed the
wilderness, rangers, spies and scouts during the late 18th and early
19th centuries, prevented scalded feet by taking off their moccasins
at night and sleeping with their feet towards the fire. Their moccasins were set to dry on sticks
near the fire or if there was the threat of attack during the night, they were
tied to the breech of their gun.
This was a practice that was learned
from the Native Americans, who were commonly described as sleeping with their
feet to the fire. A chronicler gave a
very early example of this practice, when writing about the invasion of the
Five Nations, by a large body of French and French-allied Native Americans in
January 1693, noting that “…each man,
wrapped in his cloak, with his feet pointed towards the fire in the centre,
would thus pass the night”.5
Also, when writing about capture of Francis Slocum in 1777, the author of
the Friends Intelligencer, 1854, recorded that at night “…The Indians…would make up a great fire of
logs at their feet…”.6
Nathan
Boone, Daniel Boone’s son, when corresponding with Lyman C. Draper, confirmed
that hunters, and presumably Daniel Boone himself, during the late 18th
and early 19th centuries, removed and dried their leggings and
moccasins at night, before sleeping with their feet to the fire
Oak
“ooze” contains tannic acid, an astringent which will dry and harden
your skin. A poultice made from boiled
oak bark also has antiseptic properties, reduces inflammation, and acts as a healing
agent in cases of minor burns. Additionally,
Native Americans traditionally used oak ooze to treat chapped skin. Slippery elm, ulmus rubra, is native
to Eastern North America, and its bark contains mucilage, a gel-like substance,
which is why it is called slippery elm. This
mucilage contains tannic acid, and salicylic acid, which
helps the skin to shed dead cells and reduces swelling and redness.
So, what was Scalded Feet?!
Just as with every great mystery, you will have to come back next week
and read “Sherlock Holmes and The Curious Case of The Scalded Feet, Part Two©”,
for the gripping conclusion of the mystery and to find out what “Scalded Feet” actually is!
I
hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me
on YouTube at BandanaMan Productions for other related videos, HERE. Don’t forget to follow me on both The
Woodsman’s Journal Online, HERE,
and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube. If you have questions, as always, feel free
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That
is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!
Notes
2 From
Kentucky and the Revolutionary Era, 1770-1815, by William T. Hutchinson, page 19,
3 From The
Life of Daniel Boone, edited by Ted Franklin Belue, page 480
& 490
4 From Mackenzie’s
Five Thousand Receipts,
by An American Physician, 1831; Domestic Medicine,
William, Buchan, M.D., 1848 and The Medical Botanist, and Expositor of
Diseases and Remedies: In Two Volumes, Daniel J. Cobb, 1846
5 Rev. Dr
Joseph Doddridge, Notes on the Settlement and Indian Wars of the Western
Parts of Virginia & Pennsylvania, from the year 1763 until the year 1783,
[Wellsburgh, VA; printed at the office of the Gazette, 1824] page 144 , http://www.archive.org/details/notesonsettlemen00dodd, accessed
July 26, 2011
7 From the Friends
Intelligencer, Vol. X, Published by William W. Moore, Philadelphia 1854
page 421.
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