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History Matters

By Cheryl Lassiter

Hampton Union, May 6, 2016

[The following article is courtesy of the Hampton Union and Seacoast Online.]

A merchant tailor at the turn of the 20th century said he could tell a man’s profession by the clothes he wore. A doctor’s clothes, he stated, were “generally clean and well preserved” but reeked of the antiseptic iodoform and more often than not a small vial of morphine tablets could be found tucked into one of the pockets.

For Dr. Marvin Fisher Smith of Hampton, with 200-plus patients, 12-hour working days, and a reputation for being “heavy set,” it’s hard to imagine that his clothes were as tidy as the tailor’s observations suggest. During the periodic contagions that scourged the town, Smith was said to have lived in the same clothes for days, getting in his winks while driving from one house to the next. He was a man of amazing stamina, for whom three horses were not enough to keep up with rounds that could exceed 50 visits a day. How many times he stopped to water his buggy horses at the town pump is anyone’s guess, but surely he must have been its most frequent user. For nearly 30 years, regardless the season, he could be found traveling the roads of Hampton, delivering $1-a-visit bedside medical services to his patients.

A son of a shoemaker, Smith had been born in Newbury, New Hampshire in 1852, and graduated from Dartmouth Medical College in 1882. He doctored in places like Pittsfield and Epsom before coming to Hampton in 1888, perhaps following the migration of shoemakers from Strafford and Barnstead, who themselves had followed their employers, V.K. & A.H. Jones, to their new shoe factory on High Street.

With his wife Mary and two children, he took up residence on Beach (now Winnacunnet) Road and soon made himself indispensable. It was said that when he fell ill during an outbreak of diphtheria, a fatal gloom descended over the town, as the disease bloomed unchecked without the ministrations of its faithful sawbones. Other physicians carried on Smith’s work, but compared to the doctor who treated even the most baffling diseases with surefire ability, their treatments met with little success.

Dr. Marvin Smith and Harry Brown at the town pump
Dr. Smith and horse taking a break at the town pump, c. 1899. At left is local building contractor Harry Brown.

But Smith’s treatments were not always successful, either. In 1890, when a gun exploded in the hand of 12-year-old Valentine Marston, Smith amputated the boy’s arm, but too late to prevent lockjaw from setting in. Valentine died not long after, and, according to legend, his ghost still haunts his childhood home.

First responder and coroner

In an era before the advent of professional emergency medical services, Dr. Smith was called on to perform first responder duties, sometimes even on himself. In the early summer of 1897 he was called to attempt resuscitation (without success) of a Harvard college student who had been pulled from the water at North Beach. In 1898 he could be found helping victims of the Independence Day cyclone that swept Hampton Beach, killing several people. When he took a spill and broke his arm, he set the bone himself. After a few days’ rest he was back at work.

As coroner, Smith left the world of the living sick to attend to those who had died under strange circumstances. But with forensic science still in its infancy, there was little to do except offer opinions based on what the eyes could see. In 1892 he deduced that a harmless old local named Josiah Wasson, found washed up on the bank of the Hampton River, had been murdered by blows to his head. The sheriff and county coroner were called in, an inquest was ordered, but without eye witnesses and lacking incriminating evidence, the murder remained unsolved.

Smith did not handle the case of Mary A. Marston, the despondent mother of Valentine, who in June 1899 waded fully clothed into the chilly waters of the Atlantic Ocean to drown herself, but that November he investigated the death of William Cockburn of Hampton Falls, a young shoe factory worker found dead in a boat anchored in the Hampton River. Newspapers reported that Cockburn’s face had been battered and bruised, which, one reporter said, “disturbs the people of Hampton,” who still remembered the unsolved murder of Wasson seven years earlier. That no one knew who owned the boat added to the mystery. Smith’s autopsy revealed that the man had died, not of “foul play” as some had hoped, but of heart failure “resulting from exposure.” His findings only seemed to encourage the mystery-mongers who insisted that someone had been with Cockburn and had left him alone to die.

In December 1900 another mysterious death aroused the town. Hunters had stumbled across a badly decomposed body in the swamp near the site of the Hotel Leonia, which had burned to the ground five months earlier. Only the carriage house, what is now the Victoria Inn, was saved. An immediate suspicion of murder hit the newspapers with headlines like “Hampton Excited At First By A Suspicion Of Foul Play.” The body, found dressed in a blue overcoat and carrying a silver pocket watch, wore a cap inscribed with the words “basque” and “lassaillette.” Memories were jogged, and someone remembered having seen a “queer”-acting foreign marine hanging around the Leonia months earlier. At the undertaker’s rooms in the village, Dr. Smith examined the remains and found no evidence of foul play, but could not say the cause of death, either. The man’s identity was never discovered, leaving his family to forever ponder his fate. Perhaps his is the ghost that haunts the Victoria Inn to this day.

Two days later, during the fiercest gale of the season, the Gloucester fishing schooner Mary A. Brown wrecked off Hampton Beach, killing the crew of five. In the early morning darkness of December fifth, as the storm still whipped the sea, the Coast Guard brought the first body from the water. Dr. Smith examined the body, identified as Captain Arthur Aldrich, and ruled the death an accidental drowning. Three days later the bodies of crew members Charles Green and Abraham Pennery were discovered. When the body of a fourth man, Benjamin Johnson, or Benson, washed ashore on December 19th, Smith carted it to the village to await “disposition by relatives.” The body of the fifth and last fisherman, Thomas Saulnier, was apparently never found. As a newspaper report from the time stated, “all that is left of the little fishing schooner Mary A. Brown of Gloucester is lying on Hampton Beach” (and would remain so for years to come, the subject of photographs, paintings, and postcards).

In 1901 Smith examined the body of a 38-year-old Kensington farmer who had taken a fatal dose of morphine, imbibed through a drugstore patent medicine or given to him by a well-intentioned physician. Although its habit forming properties were well known, with overdose deaths frequently reported, morphine was not yet illegal, and was even sold in children’s preparations. Smith could do little more than rule the farmer’s death accidental.

The following spring he was called on to examine the mangled body of another mystery man-this one had been laying on the street railway tracks near the lifesaving station on North Beach when he was run over by a trolley. The conductor found him wedged between the rear wheels of the trolley, with his brains protruding from the back of his crushed skull. Upon viewing the body Smith “pronounced him dead” (a no-brainer if ever there was).

Flivvering Dr. Smith

Smith was one of the first men in Hampton who could afford to put away his horse and buggy to embrace the newest form of transportation, the automobile. Perhaps he had been encouraged to do so by his son, Chief of Police Gerald A. Smith, who could have reasoned that his aging father would be safer behind the wheel of a car than holding the reins of a horse frightened by one. Instead of wrangling with indisposed horseflesh, Dr. Smith prepared to face the novel challenges of hand cranking and gear shifting.

Now equipped to go “flivvering” around town at the heady rate of 20 miles per hour, Hampton’s country doctor continued to treat patients and examine the dead until shortly before his death in 1916 at the age of 64.

History Matters is a monthly column devoted to the history of Hampton and Hampton Beach. Cheryl Lassiter is the author of “The Mark of Goody Cole: a tragic and true tale of witchcraft persecution from the history of early America” (2014). Her website is www.lassitergang.com.

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