Tag Archive: edinburgh

History Remembered

By Chloe Schama

Theresa’s temporary home in Edinburgh, 12 Randolph Road (I was staying at 39 Randolph Avenue), was covered in scaffolding when I visited it for the first time. The house was clearly in a state of overhaul: dust covered the windows and paint flaked from its walls. There were paint cans and brushes clustered together on the stoop and a ladder leaning against the front of the house. Weeds flourished in the garden.

One of the construction workers eyed me with justified curiosity as I stood looking at the house. There was no National Heritage blue-circle signifying historical landmark status posted above the door; no one else was snapping photos. But I was certain that I had found a treasure.

When I stumbled upon this story in the library, I was immediately convinced that I had found the type of history that the hallowed halls of legendary landmarks tend to silence – the type that lingers in letters and haunts street corners, the type that is too often forgotten, but provides the most intimate, personal portrait of the past.

As Walter Benjamin said, “to articulate the past historically, does not mean to recognize it ‘the way it was’ … it means to seize hold of a memory as it flashes up at a moment of danger.” There is always a danger that the less obviously and traditionally important, prominent, and powerful individuals will be left out of the history of human experience. In this inadequate surveillance of the past, the human affections that bridge history are lost.

Chloe Schama has written for the New Republic, the New York Sun, and the Guardian. She lives in Washington, D.C. Her first book, Wild Romance: A Victorian Story of a Marriage, a Trial, and a Self-Made Woman, is the biography of Theresa Yelverton. (released March 2010).

IMAGES: Edinburgh, England

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Blaming the Burke and Hare Victim

By Lisa Rosner

Why, when a beautiful girl is murdered, are people so quick to assume that it must somehow have been her own fault?

That has been the unfortunate fate of Mary Paterson, killed by Burke and Hare in April 1828, her body sold to anatomy lecturer Dr. Robert Knox. As if it were not bad enough to be burked at the age of 18, preserved in alcohol for three months and then dissected, she has also been saddled with a reputation as a notorious prostitute.

First claimed as “a person of disorderly life…cut short in her sinful career,” by an oft-quoted, though unreliable contemporary source, she was recently, and as unreliably, characterized in the Scotsman as “a voluptuous beauty whose body was for sale…” who “would hitch up her skirt in the shadows of Edinburgh’s Canongate.” Artists’ renditions of at least two different naked women circulated, each purporting to be the “true” Mary Paterson stretched out on the dissecting slab; and the rumor spread by word of mouth, and later through fiction and film, that she was recognized by her medical student lover as he stood, scalpel in hand, ready for the morning’s work.

But the very fact that Mary Paterson’s cadaver was beautiful makes it highly unlikely that she was the kind of homeless streetwalker implied by the Scotsman, and one of her friends spoke out against the contemporary rumors; “she may have been ‘irregular’ in her habits,” but “not so low as she has been represented.” The excellent Edinburgh archives confirm this, as they document the admission of Mary Paterson into the Magdalene Asylum, a kind of reform school for penitent prostitutes, at the age of 16.

This was a sign of “irregular” habits indeed, but not of notorious prostitution, because the archives also document that she left the Asylum less than week before her murder. She had no time in her brief life to embark on a “sinful career,” or to form a liaison with Burke or medical students. She was not “asking” for death: it came to her simply because, one April morning, she encountered a murderer on the Canongate.

Lisa Rosner is Professor of History at Stockton College, Pomona, NJ, where she is also Interim Director of the South Jersey Center for Digital Humanities. Anatomy Murders, the third book in her Edinburgh Trilogy, has allowed her to delve ever-deeper into the seamy side of early modern medicine. For more on Burke and Hare, including animated walking tours through 1820s Edinburgh and a re-creation of an anatomical dissection, visit http://burkeandhare.com.

IMAGE: Canongate Edinburgh Looking West, Thomas Hosmer Shepherd (c.1810 to c.1842)