What do we imagine when we hear the word “doctor”? A neat man in a white coat? A respected healer who saves lives? During the 19th and 20th centuries, when medicine was professionalized in schools and residency programs, the term “doctor” carried darker meanings. Medical students, unable to procure enough bodies for dissection, took to body snatching. In fact, medical schools often turned a blind eye to such nighttime raids. Digging up the dead was a natural prerequisite to healing the living.
Today’s medical students may have moved beyond the grave, but does this shift to legitimate procurement of cadavers make it any easier to cope when they first cut into human flesh? Human corpses and body parts have always held material value: shrunken heads as trophies of war, deformed skeletons as curios. [1] In fact, grave robbing, the practice of stealing valuables from graves, has been a part of human society as long as burial has—recall the tombs of Egyptian pharaohs. The richer the deceased, the bigger the payoff from grave robbing.
Body snatching, the theft of fresh corpses, is closely related to grave robbing. However, whereas grave robbing capitalizes on the body’s possessions, body snatching directly commoditizes the body. Instead of targeting the rich, body snatching focused on corpses belonging to those that would not missed: criminals, paupers, African Americans. The more wretched the deceased, the smaller the risk from body snatching.
Although stolen bodies often belonged to outcasts, some famous cases caused public outcry. In 1878, the body of Senator John Scott Harrison (son of President William Henry Harrison) was discovered by his nephew and son at Ohio Medical College. [2] In the Resurrection Riot of 1788, a mob hungry for medical students swept New York. Medical professionals had to carefully maintain a public persona opposed to body procurement, despite a pragmatic private side that accepted, even encouraged body snatching. It was not until the legalization of human dissection and the establishment of gift programs that medical students gave up body snatching.
Today, students only dissect unclaimed bodies or bodies voluntarily given to science. Medical schools try to prepare students for the first cut, and yet it remains an intensely intimate moment each student must learn to cope with. Even in death, the human body endures as an inviolable, sacred part of self.
Sources for Introduction Text:
- Margaret Lock, Beyond the Body Proper: Reading the Anthropology of Material Life, (Duke University Press, 2007), p. 569
- Raphael Hulkower, “From Sacrilege to Privlege: The Tale of Body Procurement for Anatomical Dissection in the United States,” (The Einstein Journal of Biology and Medicine, 2011), p. 24.
Case Items:
- Constitution and Laws of the State of New Hampshire. Printed at Dover [N.H.] by Samuel Bragg. 1805. NH Dover 345.22 N42 1805
- Strict punishments for “body-snatching,” approved June 16, 1796:
- “Fined a sum not exceeding one thousand dollars” ($15,000 today)
- “Publicly whipped not exceeding thirty-nine stripes”
- “Imprisoned not exceeding one year”
- In comparison, some other punishments:
- Fornication: “Sixty shillings” OR “ten stripes”
- Assault with Intent to Commit Murder: “One hundred stripes”
- Murder: “Death” AND “Dissection” of the Dead Body
- Letter from Five Medical Students to the President and Professors of Dartmouth College. Dartmouth College. 1810. Manuscript 810900.6
- Formal apology from medical students on behalf of their “beloved Instructor,” who went body snatching in local graveyards. Some instances of irony include:
- Citizens “have long been educated, to hold sacred” the “relics of their dead,” implying uproar stemmed not from their actions, but from the citizens’ beliefs
- Vigilance pledged only “as Members of the Institution”—something they may see as separate from nighttime raids
- Will not suffer grave-robbing “to be done, by others,” but only if “in [their] power to prevent it.”
- Photographs of Dartmouth Medical School Dissection Lab, ca. 1908. Dartmouth Medical School. Circa 1908. Photofile: Medical School -- Dissection
- Private view of dissections, in a basement and an operating theater. Note how nonchalantly the cadavers are displayed: propped against walls, sitting in laps, missing their lower halves, uncovered even when not being used.
- The Body-Snatcher. Robert Louis Stevenson. New York: Merriam. 1895. Val 826 St5 O8. Also available online via Hathi Trust.
- Fictional story that captures body snatching as profane bridge between life and death. Summary:
- Town drunkard Fettes encounters “a great London doctor” named Wolfe Macfarlane. Fettes and Macfarlane share a history of working as medical students in the ‘materials acquisition division’—they supplied bodies. Their duty? “To take what was brought, to pay the price, and to avert the eye from any evidence of crime.” Even if they committed the crime by murdering the innocent Mr. Gray.
- The situation escalates and they are called away on a dark and stormy night to exhume another body, this time a woman’s. It starts raining, their only light goes out, their horse spooks, and the deep ruts of the road jolt their macabre trophy between them. Finally, Fettes and Macfarlane have had enough and uncover their cadaver, only to discover it’s Mr. Gray.
- Medical Instruments and Tools Having Belonged to H. O. Smith, Non-Graduate, Dartmouth Class of 1886. Smith O. Henry. Dartmouth College. Realia 191
- Leather bag with glass vials, many of which still possess original labels and contents
- Black leather suturing kit with fish-hook needles and spools for surgical thread
- Two wooden kits of scalpels
- Brass scales with weights
- Black, velvet-lined case with ophthalmologist’s tools
- Body of Work: Meditations on Mortality from the Human Anatomy Lab. Christine Montross. New York: Penguin. 2007. Available in Baker Berry.
- Psychiatrist’s memoir detailing her relationship with her cadaver in medical school. Excerpt:
- Most of us, I think, harbor an ingrained, innate aversion to doing willful harm to the body. Of course, such harm is regularly done: adolescents shoot each other over vapid allegiances, men kick their pregnant wives, children smash beetles to bits under their heels. There is an internal restraint, however, that must be overcome, by rage or fear or sheer will, before we will do harm to a body. And so, watching the flesh coil away, the bone rising above the chest as dust, I feel that feeling you get when you think of the moment your teeth broke as a child or you hear about a fracture in which the splintered bone pierced the skin—an inescapable feeling of wrong…I feel the instinct to place my hand on the cadaver’s arm: This will only hurt a minute. This will be over soon.