At a time when strapping on a gun was as commonplace and as necessary as breathing, you can imagine that the odds of getting shot were fairly high. Treatments for gunshot were pretty basic—dig the lead out if you could and if you couldn’t you were likely a goner. Not a good scenario when doctors were hard to come by.
When
we’re crafting our western romances, we usually have to do a lot of research
about various things and sometimes we run across truly amazing stories. Here’s
one I stumbled upon when I was researching gunshot wounds and treatment. I
thought you might like to know about one of the most unique women who lived in Texas .
Sofie
Dalia Herzog was born in 1846 in Vienna, Austria. Her father was a physician.
At the age of fourteen, she married Dr. August Herzog and they moved to America
where she gave birth to fifteen children. There were three sets of twins and
eight children died in infancy. But she had a dream of practicing medicine so
she went back to Austria to medical school. For nine years, until August died,
she treated patients in Hoboken, New Jersey.
Dr.
Sofie moved to Brazoria , Texas in the late 1800’s. To say she was
very colorful was putting it mildly. The lady doctor’s arrival in
the small coastal community of Brazoria created a huge stir. She was attractive, energetic and a highly
skilled physician. Though not Texas ’ first woman doctor, in 1895 she was
definitely a pioneer in a male-dominated field of the Victorian era. Not only
was Dr. Sofie out of place in her chosen profession, but her appearance shocked
a good many. She wore her hair cropped short, rode a horse astride instead of sidesaddle,
and shaded her face with a man’s hat. Needless to say she set tongues wagging.
But the doctor had obvious medical skill and little competition, so when
someone needed assistance, they weren’t too picky about the gender. Soon folks
were calling her simply Doctor Sofie.
She
became particularly adept at removing bullets from
gunshot victims. One of her techniques was elevating a gunshot patient so that
gravity would aid in getting the lead out. Only twice in her career was she
unsuccessful in recovering a bullet. When she had accumulated 24 extracted pieces
of lead from gunfighters, she had a jeweler fashion the slugs into a necklace
with a gold bead threaded between each slug. She wore it constantly as a good
luck charm the rest of her life.
Word of her medical skills and pleasing bedside manner soon spread. Dr. Sofie made calls in her buggy or traveled astride a horse. Often, she rode on handcars or trains to get to someone along the rail line in need of a doctor. In 1906, the railroad formalized its relationship with Dr. Sofie, appointing her chief surgeon of the S.L.B. & M Railroad. But, when headquarters learned that a female doctor had been hired, Dr. Sofie received a polite letter asking her to relinquish her position. She stubbornly refused and remained on the line’s payroll the rest of her life.
In
addition to her medical practice, Dr. Sofie operated her own pharmacy, built
and operated a hotel, and became wealthy by investing in real estate. She was
very enterprising.
In 1913, the 65-year-old doctor married Marion Huntington—a 70-year-old
widower—and moved to his plantation seven miles outside Brazoria. Having
reached an age when many would have retired, Dr. Sofie continued her practice,
commuting each day from the plantation to town in a new Model T Ford—the first
automobile in the county.
Fourteen years later, Dr. Sofie died of a stroke at aHouston hospital on July 21, 1925 . At her request, they
buried her with her lucky bullet necklace, evidence of her surgical skills and
charming eccentricity.
Fourteen years later, Dr. Sofie died of a stroke at a
Here are a few prices for medical procedures and assistance in the
1800’s:
A
visit within one mile --- $1.00
Each
succeeding mile --- .50
Simple
case of midwifery --- $5.00
For
bleeding --- .50
Bullet
Wounds --- Between $1.00 to 10.00
For
setting fracture --- $5.00 to 10.00
Amputating
Arm --- $10.00
Amputating
Leg --- $20.00
For
advice and prescription in office --- $1.00
For
difficult cases, fee based in proportion to difficulty.
But
as was often the case, the doctor accepted goods in lieu of money. There were probably doctors who refused to treat someone because they couldn’t pay but not too many.
How about these prices? Sure be nice if medical treatment was this cheap today!!