[Editorial Note: Jane Grey Cannon Swisshelm (1815-1884) was born in Pittsburgh into strict Covenanter branch of the Presbyterian Church. Her father died in 1823, and she helped support the family (mother, brother, and sister) by teaching lace-making; she also painted on velvet. At fourteen she became a schoolteacher. She married James Swisshelm in 1836; he was a farmer's son and a devout Methodist who insisted she give up painting. He also sought to turn her into a Methodist and insisted upon wifely obedience. In 1839 she left him to nurse her mother who died the following year. Jane then turned to journalism. In 1842 her husband returned to Pittsburgh, and they resumed living together on his family farm. In 1848 she launched the Pittsburgh Visiter [her spelling] as an anti-slavery and, later, a woman's rights weekly. Within a few years national circulation topped 6,000 making it one of the most widely read reform papers. One of the paper's most popular features was Swisshelm's weekly "letter to country girls" which she collected in book form in 1853. As with many of her "letters," the one excerpted here has an autobiographical dimension. Swisshelm's father died of consumption (i.e., tuberculosis) as did several other members of his family. As a young girl, Jane was diagnosed, mistakenly, as suffering from the disease. Various remedies urged by her doctor failed, and her mother took charge of her care. Under a regime of rest, fresh air, moderate exercise, and simple food, Jane thrived. This convinced her that the medical profession had little to offer and that so-called "natural" remedies were much to be preferred. Before dismissing this view, recall that the germ theory of disease, the basis of most modern medical progress, has not yet been developed. One may get some idea of what medical care for women was like in the first half of the nineteenth century by examining the title pages of two popular books.]
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