Dr James Esdaile (1808-1859), the eldest son of the Rev. James Esdaile and Margaret Blair, was born on 6 February 1808 in Montrose, Angus, Scotland, is a notable figure in the history of mesmerism. Esdaile married three times.His first wife died during their voyage to India; his second wife died in India some years later. He was survived by his third wife, Eliza Weatherhead, whom he married sometime around 1851.
Esdaile studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh, graduating M.D. in 1830.
In 1830, he was appointed as assistant surgeon to the East India Company, and arrived in Calcutta, Bengal (then the capital of British India), in 1831. Having suffered from chronic bronchitis and asthma since his adolescence, Esdaile thought that India's different climate would be of benefit. He suffered a total breakdown and was given an extended furlough from 1836 to 1838.During this time he travelled extensively. His 1839 work was a result of these travels.
He returned from his furlough to Calcutta, and was soon appointed to the small Hooghly Hospital; and, as a consequence of this, was also responsible for the local Jail hospital.
On 4 April 1845, Esdaile performed his first mesmeric procedure:
By his own admission, Esdaile had never seen a mesmeric act; but, given the level of pain of this specific patient, and the understanding that he had gained from what he had read, it occurred to him that mesmerism might be of great value:
Esdaile did succeed.
As performed by Esdaile, the mesmeric act was an exhausting procedure:
In a short time, Esdaile had gained a wide repuation amongst the European and indigenous communities for painless surgery, especially in cases of the scrotal "tumours" that were endemic in Bengal at that timeSome of these massive scrotal growths were as large as 112lbs/51kg (Gauld, 1992, p.222). due to filariasis (similar to elephantiasis) that was transmitted by mosquitoes. Esdaile's mesmeric anaesthesia was extremely safe:
In 1846, Esdaile's work with mesmerism-assisted painless surgery at Hoogly had come to the attention of the Deputy Governor of Bengal, Sir Herbert Maddocks. Maddocks appointed a committee of seven reputable (medical and non-medicial) officials to investigate Esdaile's claims. They submitted a positive report (on 9 October 1846), and a small hospital in Calcutta was put at his disposal in Novenber 1846.
By 1848, a mesmeric hospital suppported entirely by public subscription was opened in Calcutta especially for Esdaile's work. It closed 18 months later by the Deputy Governor of Bengal, Sir John Littler.Gauld (1992), p.223..
In 1848, Lord Dalhousie, the Governor-General of India, appointed Esdaile to the position of Presidency Surgeon; and, in 1850, whilst not supporting the continuation of the mesmeric hospital in Calcutta, Dalhousie had so much respect for Esdaile and his work, that he appointed him to the position of Marine Surgeon.
Esdaile retired from the British East India Company in 1853, upon the expiration of his 20 years' contract.
Although allusions are constantly made to Esdaile being a pioneer in the use of hypnosis for surgical anaesthesia in the era immediately prior to James Young Simpson's discovery of chloroform, it is unequivocally clear that Esdaile never used hypnosis at all; he always used mesmerism.
The same sort of misplaced allusions are made in relation to Anton Mesmer himself, who also always used mesmerism, and never used hypnotism.
And, although some would trace the practice of hypnosis and hypnotherapy back to Faria, Gassner, and Hell, it is conventional to trace what we now know as hypnotism back to James Braid's reaction to a public exhibition of mesmeric techniques given by Charles Lafontaine in Manchester on 13 November 1841.
1808 births | 1859 deaths | Natives of Angus | Hypnosis | Scottish surgeons | Scottish travel writers | University of Edinburgh alumni
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"James Esdaile".
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