A Necessary Evil: The Midwives of Anne Arundel County
Loading...
Links to Files
Permanent Link
Author/Creator
Author/Creator ORCID
Date
2015
Type of Work
Department
Program
Master of Fine Arts in Creative Nonfiction
Citation of Original Publication
Rights
Collection may be protected under Title 17 of the U.S. Copyright Law. To obtain information or permission to publish or reproduce, please contact the Goucher Special Collections & Archives at 410-337-6347 or email archives@goucher.edu.
Subjects
Abstract
I’ve poured over sources, both primary and secondary. Right now I have nine books checked out from
the library. My computer has gotten so full of digitized articles from the Baltimore Sun and the New
York Times , medical papers and journal articles, and pamphlets and books, that I barely have enough
space to download anymore. I’m trying to recreate the world of Progressive Era America with what
has been left behind.
I need the broad picture, which I get from books like Tina Cassidy’s Birth: The Surprising History of
How We are Born and Judy BarrettLitoff’s
American Midwives: 1860 to the Present , and the minutia
too, like the published letters of Margaret Sanger to the biography of Julia Lathrop. Interlibrary loan
has been my friend, allowing me to get almost any book I’ve needed.
But what I love the most about research is the archive. It’s quiet as I delve into private lives of the past.
I gaze at the letters of Lilian Welsh here at Goucher, the scribbles in the margin of Dr. John Whitridge
William’s textbooks at Hopkins, the notes in a midwife’s journal at the Jewish Museum of Maryland,
the photographs of agricultural workers at the University of Maryland Baltimore County. I’m the
optimist; I believe that if I look long enough, I’ll find something of amazing value. That feeling is
encouraged by times like when, in small print in a Nurse’s Alumni Magazine at Hopkins, I read, “Infant
son of Dr. and Mrs. Guy Steele passed in December.” A doctor crusading against infant mortality lost
his own son. To make my story compelling, I’ve learned to get the historical context, but also to dig
deep into the little details that bring characters and places to life.