Devastation from the Rochester tornado of 1883. |
Note: As
I type this my daughter Heather Larsen is
in Rochester Minnesota with her
mother Kathy Brady-Larsen. Today
they are taking in the local sights and biding time until she swallows a camera pill on Monday in an attempt to diagnose the cause of her inability to process and retain iron
and the resultant critical anemia.
She is being treated at the Mayo
Clinic, the top rated hospital
in the United States which pioneered
cooperative, cross disciplinary group practice and is noted for its state of the art diagnostics. In other words, Heather couldn’t be in
better hands. Which is why the following
item caught my attention as I was reviewing historical events on this date for
my blog entry.
It
was a hot, muggy day in southeast Minnesota on August 31,
1883. Joseph Lenard an eye witness
to events that day would later recall
in History of Olmsted County, Minnesota:
At Rochester the
day had been hot with a strong southeast wind, the air was smoky and
oppressive, the heavens were overcast with clouds of a dull leaden line, and
there were, apparently, three strata, all moving in different directions.
In
other words, conditions were ripe
for violent weather. At 3:30 in the
afternoon a tornado estimated as an F3 in the modern rating system touched down near Pleasant Grove, about 16 miles southwest of Rochester. Two people were
killed and hurt. It was the first of at
least three twisters spun out of
waves of towering thunderheads. The last, an F2 hit near St. Charles 15
miles east of Rochester at 8:30 that evening.
It killed one and injured 19.
But
the biggest blow was reserved for the region’s principle hub. A massive F5 storm came down at Hayfield
and stayed on the ground for 25 miles until it struck Rochester then lifted
back up into the clouds. In its
destructive path 40 farms were hit and mostly destroyed as were a modern
steal railroad trestle and the northern
third of the city where 135 homes
and numerous business were totally smashed and 200 other buildings damaged. Thirty-seven were killed and at least and
over 200 injured badly enough to seek
treatment.
Stunned
survivors
frantically searched through the rubble
dragging out the maimed. But there was nowhere to take them. In the whole state of Minnesota there were
only three Hospitals outside of Minneapolis and St. Paul, note anywhere near the stricken city. An emergency
clinic was hastily set up in Rommel’s Hall, a German social center. Local practitioners led by Dr. David
Berkman and Dr. William W. Mayo
provided emergency care but it was
apparent that many of the injured would require days or weeks of care. They needed a hospital.
He was still a small town Doctor making house calls in the 1880s. |
In
Dr. Mayo, they had just the man to start one.
Mayo was then 65 years old. He
had treated casualties at New Ulm during the Great Souix uprising of 1862 so was unusually adept at the
treatment of traumatic injury. He had first come to Rochester the
following year as an Army surgeon for
the local draft board. He so liked the growing city that when his
enlistment was up he moved his family to the city and established a local
medical practice. Unlike many doctors in
the hinterlands, Mayo to pains to
regularly travel to the east to keep abreast of the latest advances and procedures in
medicine. He was one of the first
doctors in the area to use a microscope as
a diagnostic tool. Both of his sons, Charles
and William J. had followed his
footsteps and attended medical
school. Charles had just graduated and assisted his father in
the emergency clinic. First year student
William was also able to help.
The
senior Dr. Mayo recruited the Sisters of
Saint Francis, a teaching order
with no medical background to nurse
his injured patients. Mother Alfred Moes agreed with Mayo
that a permanent hospital was needed in Rochester and offered her considerable skills as a fundraiser to raise a building. Mayo became its Chief of Medicine assisted by
his sons and the sisters became regular nurses.
St. Mary’s Hospital opened in
1889 with 12 beds.
The
busy and respected Dr. Mayo served his community in many ways beyond his
practice and the hospital. At various
time he served as an alderman, mayor, and
school board member and served in
the Minnesota Senate from 1891 to
1895. It was said his finger prints
could be found on every civic improvement for thirty years.
Dr.
Mayo finally retired from his practice in 1892 at the age of 72 leaving his
sons in charge. They brought several
other top doctors into the practice as partners. In 1919 they incorporated as the Mayo Properties
Association and established the Mayo
Clinic as a not-for-profit.
The
elder Mayo had kept busy with science
projects. He became interested in agricultural chemistry and was
developing a process for the distillation
of alcohol from animal and vegetable waste. In 1910 his arm caught in a machine
crusher requiring the amputation of
his hand. Complications set in and he
died on March 6, 1911 at the age of 91.
By 1912 St. Mary's had grown from just 12 beds to this impressive building. Two years later the Mayo Clinic erected its firs stand alone building. |
But
the practice and Clinic flourished. In
1914 it erected the first of several buildings separate from St. Mary’s with
which it was still affiliated. Every
modern idea was incorporated and several introduced like steam sterilization rooms, all-metal
surgical tools and equipment, pneumatic tube system, knee operated sinks, and a state of the art HVAC system. As a result infection rates plummeted.
More importantly, the building was the first designed for an integrated group medical practice which
encouraged cooperation and consultation among specialists.
The
Mayo Clinic as continued to expand and has earned a world-wide reputation. Now in addition to Rochester there are
major Mayo Clinic campuses in Jacksonville,
Florida and Pheonix, Arizona. The operations of St. Mary’s Hospital, Methodist Hospital, and the clinic are
now consolidated under the banner of Mayo
Clinic Health System and operate more than 70 hospitals and clinics across
Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin, and Georgia. It also operates
several medical schools including
the flagship Mayo Medical School in
Rochester. At its far-flung facilities
it employs thousands of physicians and tens of thousands other medical professionals and support staff.
Statues of the Mayo Brothers sit outside the gleaming main building on the Mayo Clinic campus in Rochester. |
The
Clinic in Rochester, was ranked nationally
by US
News and World Report in the top 10 in all but one of 16 measured specialties,
in the top 5 in 13 specialties, and
was the #1 ranked hospital in 8 of the 12.
All very impressive.
And
to think it started in the rubble of a Twister….
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