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The Pest House, or House of Pestilence, was Lynchburg's first hospital. It was located at the outermost edge of town, on land next to the Public Burying Ground (or City Cemetery). Throughout the 1840s and 1850s those infected with contagious diseases like smallpox, cholera, and scarlet fever, were quarantined in the Pest House.
Pest House Room In the nineteenth-century, Lynchburg residents who contracted such contagious diseases as smallpox or measles were quarantined in the Pest House, which was originally located near Third and Wise Streets, within what is now the Old City Cemetery. The medical care and standards of cleanliness we know today were virtually non-existent, and most patients died. The dead were buried only a few yards away. By 1862 Lynchburg had become a major Civil War hospital center, and the Pest House was used as the quarantine hospital for Confederate soldiers. Thirty-three year old Dr. Terrell discovered the wretched conditions in the Pest House and volunteered to assume responsibility for the soldiers. "I put my painter and carpenter to work, using lime and yellow paint on outside and black on inside to save my patients' eyes. [...] To overcome the offensive odor I had dry white sand put on the floor. [...] I had a barrel of linseed oil and limewater to use as an ointment, with which I greased sores, so had no more sticking of clothing." A monument to the memory of the 102 soldiers who died of smallpox during the Civil War is near the entrance to the adjacent Confederate Section of the Cemetery. The reforms enacted by Dr. Terrell reduced the Pest House mortality rate from 50 percent to five percent. Dr. Terrell's Office For three years during the War between the States, "I worked over the dead and dying, some Federals,...and remained at my hospital till the first of June, 1865, until every man was discharged, then home without a cent to start the practice of medicine." Many patients came to Dr. Terrell's office, and he traveled on horseback to others in their homes throughout the counties.
Quotations from Dr. John J. Terrell's own reminiscences, "A Confederate Surgeon's Story," published in the Confederate Veteran magazine, December 1931. |