Polio Wars (64 page)

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Authors: Naomi Rogers

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Quietly, some NFIP chapters began to use the term “Kenny” in their own fundraising. In Delaware the NFIP chapter sent out a fundraising letter assuring supporters that their donations had “sent 26 children to the Kenny Clinic [at the Wilmington General Hospital] for hospitalization and medical treatment” and all but 2 had “returned to school or to their play pens minus the deformities and twisted bodies that were so prevalent in the days when Polio was thought to be unconquerable.”
296
The growing influence of the Kenny method was visible in polio care everywhere.

NOTES

1.
“Keep Sister Kenny Here”
New York Journal-American
February 17 1944; “Sister Kenny Irate, May Leave Country”
New York Times
February 4 1944; “Sister Kenny Expects To Leave Soon”
Hartford Courant
February 4 1944; “Polio Funds Short, Kenny May Leave U.S.”
Washington Post
February 4 1944. This amount was probably prompted by the news that the NFIP was providing a 5-year grant of $150,000 for a physical medicine center at the Graduate School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania; “The Scientific Study and Development of Physical Medicine”
Science
(January 7 1944) 99: 10–11.

2.
Frank D. Campion
The A.M.A. and U.S. Health Policy since 1940
(Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 1984), 129–130; Patricia Spain Ward
“United States versus American Medical Association et al.
: The Medical Anti-Trust Case of 1938–1943”
American Studies
(1989) 30: 123–153.

3.
Greer Williams “Medicine's India-Rubber Man”
Saturday Evening Post
October 19 1946, 26; see also “Docs Flock”
Time
(May 22 1944) 43: 46; “A.M.A. Meeting”
Time
(June 26 1944) 43: 50; “Remedy for Fishbein”
Time
(July 15 1946) 48: 94. The vote in 1944 was 144 to 9 and in 1945 it was 106 to 60.

4.
See, for example, Ida M. Kay to Dear Dr. Knapp, February 2 1943, [enclosed with] Miland E. Knapp to Dear Dr. Gudakunst, February 5 1943, Am. 15.8, Folder 29 [accessed in 1992 before recent recataloging], UMA-SC.

5.
Kenny to Dear Sir [Editor,
Minneapolis Star-Journal
], February 1 1944, Minneapolis—Newspapers, 1941–1945, MHS-K; “Help Me, or I Quit U.S.—Sister Kenny”
Chicago Herald-American
February 4 1944; [editorial] “Must Sister Kenny Leave?”
Tulsa Tribune
February 8 1944; “Sister Kenney [sic] Withholds New Polio Discovery”
Hartford Courant
February 5 1944; “Early Diagnosis of Polio Claimed by Sister Kenny”
Washington Post
February 6 1944. Note that Miland Knapp told visitors to Minneapolis that although he had tried he could not feel what she was describing; Knapp quoted in Draft of Report of the Committee [enclosed with] Pepper to Darling, September 29, 1944, Committee to Review Request of Elizabeth Kenny Institute to National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis: General, Medical Sciences, 1944, National Academy of Sciences, Washington D.C. (hereafter Review Committee, 1944, NAS).

6.
“Keep Sister Kenny Here”
New York Journal-American
February 17 1944; “Sister Kenny Expects To Leave Soon”
Hartford Courant
February 4 1944; “Sister Kenny Says Fishbein ‘Asked' Her to Leave Country”
New York Times
February 4 1944; “Sister Kenny Irate, May Leave Country”
New York Times
February 4 1944.

7.
“Physiologic Nonsense and Poliomyelitis”
JAMA
(January 22 1944) 124: 236. Fishbein referred to Joseph Moldaver (
JAMA
1943), Watkins, Brazier, and Schwab (
JAMA
1943) and Stanley Cobb (
Archives of Medicine
1943).

8.
Memorandum re: [transcript] Telephone Conversation between BO'C and Mr. Coniff of the
Journal-American
—11.23 A.M., February 4 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K; “University Willing To Aid Sister Kenny”
New York Times
February 5 1944; “O'Connor Denies Foundation Break with Sister Kenny”
Hartford Courant
February 6 1944.

9
. [Editorial] “Must Sister Kenny Leave?”
Tulsa Tribune
February 8 1944.

10.
“Keep Sister Kenny Here”
New York Journal-American
February 17 1944; see also “Keep Sister Kenny Here”
Baltimore News Post
February 15 1944.

11.
Roy J. Bergstrom to Gentlemen, February 4 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

12.
Arthur Mitchell to Dear Doctor Irwin, February 12 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

13.
“Launch $150,000 Drive to Keep Sister Kenny Here”
Pictorial Review
March 11 1944,
Chicago Herald-American
, Clippings, 1944, MHS-K; “Laud Work of Sister Kenny”
Chicago
Herald-American
March 7 1944; see also Philip Leslie Shutt [Boone County, Illinois NFIP chapter] to My Dear Sister Kenny, March 23 1944, NFIP-Misc., 1941–1944, MHS-K. A featured participant was writer Noreen Linduska who had experienced 2 kinds of polio during the 1943 Chicago epidemic and whose autobiography
My Polio Past
later enthusiastically praised Kenny's methods; Robert D. Dinsmore “Happy Victory [review of
My Polio Past
]”
New York Times
October 26 1947; Lloyd Wendt “Polio Victim Writes Story Full of Hope”
Chicago Daily Tribune
August 1 1947; see also Noreen Lunduska
My Polio Past
(Chicago: Pellegrini & Cudahy, 1947). The Disabled Persons Association of America tried to ensure its members employment in war industries.

14.
“Launch $150,000 Drive to Keep Sister Kenny Here”
Pictorial Review
March 11 1944,
Chicago Herald-American
, Clippings, 1944, MHS-K.

15.
[No caption]
Sunday Mirror
March 12 1944, Clippings, 1944, MHS-K.

16.
H. Spencer Jordan to My Dear Sister Kenny, October 28 1944, Complimentary Letters of Support 1944–1949, MHS-K.

17.
[Editorial] “Sister Kenny”
Washington Post
February 5 1944.

18.
“Sister Kenney [sic] Requested to Leave U.S.”
Citizens' Health News
(February 1944) 2: 2; “Who's Fighting for What Freedom?”
Citizens' Health News
(February 1944) 2: 1, Clippings, 1944, MHS-K.

19.
H. Spencer Jordan to My Dear Sister Kenny, October 28 1944, Complimentary Letters of Support 1944–1949, MHS-K.

20.
Cosette Drew Dexter to Dear Sister Kenny, February 2 1944, Complimentary Letters of Support 1944–1949, MHS-K.

21.
R. A. Gurney, letter to editor,
St Paul Pioneer Press
February 1944, Case Files- Misc., A-K, 1943–1946, MHS-K.

22.
[Editorial] “Must Sister Kenny Leave?”
Tulsa Tribune
February 8 1944.

23.
L. L. Oeland to Dear Sister Kinney [sic], February 5 1944, Board of Directors, MHS-K.

24.
Edna V. Paul to Dear Mr. O'Connor, February 4 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

25.
Edward James Smythe to Dear Sister Kenny, February 4 1944, Complimentary Letters of Support 1944–1949, MHS-K.

26.
Editorial, “After 10 Years of Giving America Begins to Wonder”
Seattle Times
February 13 1944; see also [editorial] “Must Sister Kenny Leave?”
Tulsa Tribune
February 8 1944.

27.
Edward James Smythe to Dear Sister Kenny, February 4 1944, Complimentary Letters of Support 1944–1949, MHS-K.

28.
C. E. Conway to Dear Sister Kenny, July 24 1944, Chicago Associate Nurses, 1944, MHS-K; Chicago Nurses Committee “We Urge You Now To Write or Wire Your Congressman … ” [notice] March 27 1945, [enclosed with] Morris [Fishbein] to My Dear Basil, March 30 1945, Public Relations, MOD-K.

29.
Morris [Fishbein] to My Dear Basil, March 30 1945, Public Relations, MOD-K. Note orthopedic nurse Carmelita Calderwood warned the NFIP that it was “a non-professional group” that had “hitched up with Hearst papers” and had “been a cause of disquiet in nursing circles in Chicago; [Notes on conversation between] Mr. Cusack and Miss Calderwood, April 24 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

30.
Elizabeth Kenny “God Is My Doctor: Chapter I”
American Weekly
March 29 1944, 18. It was ghostwritten by RKO publicity agent Dan Mainwaring.

31.
Elizabeth Kenny “God Is My Doctor: Chapter II”
American Weekly
April 2 1944, 18; Elizabeth Kenny “God Is My Doctor: Chapter III”
American Weekly
April 9 1944, 17; Elizabeth Kenny “God Is My Doctor: Chapter II”
American Weekly
April 2 1944, 19.

32.
Alice Marble
Sister Elizabeth Kenny: Wonder Women of History as Told by Alice Marble
(New York: Wonder Women Publishing Co., Spring 1944). Thanks to Bert Hansen for sending me a copy of this comic book.

33.
“[Script] BO'C Interview, WHAS—Louisville, Ky. 2-29-44; 4:40–4.45 PM,” Public Relations, MOD-K.

34.
The Story of the Kenny Method
(New York: National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, 1944), 4–8; see also Norine Foley “March of Dimes O.K.'s Sister Kenny Methods”
Los Angeles Examiner
March 24 1944; “Statement on Kenny Method By O'Connor”
Minneapolis Star-Journal
March 16 1944; Basil O'Connor “The Story of the Kenny Method”
Archives of Physical Therapy
(April 1944) 25: 231–234.

35.
“The National Foundation and Sister Kenny's Work” February 8 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K; and see
The Story of the Kenny Method
, 4–6; John Lavan to My Dear Mrs. Miller, September 1 1944, Morris Fishbein Collection, vol. 77, Folder 8, Joseph Regenstein Library, University of Chicago; The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis
Annual Report 1943
(New York: National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, 1943), 46; “Sister Kenny's Work”
Hartford Courant
February 9 1944; Basil O'Connor “The Story of the Kenny Method”
Archives of Physical Therapy
(April 1944) 25: 231–234; Howard W. Blakeslee [science editor, AP] “Whispering Campaign” [enclosed in] Blakeslee to Dear Mr. O'Connor, February 21 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K; [Script] WPTF-“Fighting Infantile Paralysis,” Raleigh, N.C. March 11 [1944]–7:30–8:00 PM, Public Relations, MOD-K; “Statement on Kenny Method By O'Connor”
Minneapolis Star-Journal
March 16 1944.

36.
“Sister Kenny's Work”
Hartford Courant
February 9 1944.

37.
“Sister Kenny's Work”
Hartford Courant
February 9 1944; [Script] WPTF-“Fighting Infantile Paralysis,” Raleigh, N.C. March 11 [1944]–7:30–8:00 PM, Public Relations, MOD-K;
The Story of the Kenny Method
, 10.

38.
“Paralysis Method Held Over[-]praised”
New York Times
April 11 1944.

39.
[Script] WPTF- “Fighting Infantile Paralysis,” Raleigh, N.C. March 11 [1944]–7:30–8:00 PM, Public Relations, MOD-K.

40.
The Story of the Kenny Method
, 5, 10; [Script] WPTF-“Fighting Infantile Paralysis,” Raleigh, N.C. March 11 [1944]–7:30–8:00 PM, Public Relations, MOD-K; “The National Foundation and Sister Kenny's Work” February 8 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

41.
PJAC to DWG Memorandum, March 8 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

42.
The Story of the Kenny Method
, 11.

43.
Eddie Cantor to Dear Basil, March 20 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K. Cantor's “Show Business” was one of the top movies of 1944.

44.
Mary [Pickford] to Dear Basil [O'Connor] March 11 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K. Pickford's work with the NFIP is not mentioned in Scott Eyman
Mary Pickford: America's Sweetheart
(New York: Donald I. Fine, 1990).

45.
Peter J. A. Cusack to Dear Mary [Pickford] March 18 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

46.
W. C. Higginbotham to Dear Sir, February 23 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

47.
L. A. Karns, [secretary to W. A. Harriman] to Dear Mr. O'Connor, March 7 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K; Henry Ford to Dear Mr. Higginbotham, March 7 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K; James F. Bell to Dear Mr. O'Connor, March 2 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K; Peter J. A. Cusack to My Dear Mr. Clayton, March 7 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K; W. L. Clayton to Dear Mr. Higginbotham, March 6 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

48.
F. B. Adams to Dear Mr. Higginbotham, March 13 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

49.
Jack Alexander “Minneapolis-St Paul”
Saturday Evening Post
(April 3 1948), 23.

50.
James F. Bell to My Dear Mr. O'Connor, March 8 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

51.
Ibid.

52.
O'Connor did however agree to accept Bell's letter of resignation from the NFIP board after Bell argued that there was a conflict of interest with his position as University of Minnesota regent; James F. Bell to My Dear Mr. O'Connor, July 22 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K; O'Connor to Bell, July 27 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

53.
Basil O'Connor to My Dear Mr. Michaels, February 15 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

54.
National Research Council, Division of Medical Sciences, “Report of Special Committee to Review Request Submitted by Elizabeth Kenny Institute, Inc. to National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, Inc.,” November 8 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K, 16 hereafter “Report of Special Committee.”

55.
Arthur D. Reynolds to My Dear Mr. O'Connor, November 22 1944, Public Relations, MOD-K.

56.
“Statement By Marvin L. Kline Mayor of Minneapolis” [c.1943] MHS; see also Al Woodruff “Kline Opens Defense From Witness Chair”
Minneapolis Star
January 27 1961.

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