Harlow Giles Unger, photo courtesy Mount Vernon Ladies Association |
Harlow Giles Unger is the author of the new biography Dr. Benjamin Rush: The Founding Father Who Healed a Wounded Nation. His many other books include biographies of John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay. He is a former Distinguished Visiting Fellow at George Washington's Mount Vernon and worked as a journalist for many years.
Q: Why did
you decide to focus on Dr. Benjamin Rush in your latest biography?
A: Of the 56
signers of the Declaration of Independence, Dr. Benjamin Rush was one of the
few who owned no slaves and took the words “all men are created equal”
literally. The only signer with an M.D. degree, he was the only American leader
who fought for independence, not to end British taxation, but to end slavery, obtain
equal rights for women, and end child labor.
Q: You
describe Rush as "the nation's first great humanitarian." Why do you
see him that way, and how was he seen during his lifetime?
A: Unlike
most others who signed the Declaration of Independence to prevent Britain from
taxing them, Dr. Benjamin Rush was alone in demanding independence from Britain
to ensure all Americans—men, and women, and children of all races and
creeds—the “rights of man,” as they were called then.
Listed in part
in the First Amendment of the Constitution, the rights of man in America came
to mean, among other individual freedoms, equal rights and protection under the
law; security of one’s person from unlawful arrest, prosecution, and
persecution; trial by a jury of one’s peers in cases of legitimate prosecution;
freedom of speech; and freedom to practice the religion of one’s choice.
Though often
alone in calling for social reforms, his fellow Founding Fathers revered him,
with President John Adams saying, “Rush has not left his equal in America, nor
that I know, in the world.” President Thomas Jefferson agreed. After learning
of Rush’s death, he stated, “A better man than Rush could not have left us,
more benevolent, more learned, of finer genius or more honest.”
Q: You also
call him the "father of psychiatry"--the title of one of the book's
chapters. What was his impact on this field, and what is his legacy today?
A: I called Dr.
Rush the “Father of Psychiatry” because that is what the American Psychiatric
Association called him, even placing a bronze plaque to that effect on his
grave in Philadelphia. The association carries his image on its official seal.
His impact
on the field of psychiatry is evident today in the use of psychotherapy as a
basic treatment in psychiatric care—a technique he invented and called “talk
therapy” a century before Freud adapted it in treating patients in Vienna,
Austria.
Dr. Rush
also invented the earliest forms of occupational and physical therapy, which
remain basic to many modern medical and psychiatric treatments.
In addition
to having laid the foundations of modern psychiatry, Rush’s name is blazoned
across Chicago’s enormous Rush University, one of the nation’s premier
institutions in the fields of medicine and science. It includes Rush University
Medical Center, Rush College of Nursing, the College of Health Sciences at Rush
University, the Graduate College at Rush University, and Rush Medical College.
Q: How did
you research the book, and did you learn anything you found particularly fascinating?
A: Researching
my book Dr. Benjamin Rush meant reading and studying several thousand books,
articles, and manuscripts—many written by Rush himself—in libraries and
repositories in New York, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C.
Apart from
books and articles by Rush listed in the bibliography of my book, I also read
and studied an enormous amount of correspondence to him and about him written
by the Founding Fathers of our nation who knew Rush personally—George
Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, to name just a few.
What was
evident from my research was how advanced his thinking was in the field of
human rights. Indeed, he stood all but alone among the Founding Fathers to call
for equal rights for all Americans, regardless of gender, race, and
creed—rights still denied to some extent to many women, African-Americans,
Hispanic-Americans, and certain religious groups.
Q: What are
you working on now?
A: A
biography of Thomas Paine, whose words in the fiery 1776 document Common Sense all
but ensured American victory and independence in the Revolutionary War.
Paine’s words
were like no others in history, leaping off the page, embracing readers—indeed,
whole peoples. In an age when spoken and written words were the only forms of
communication, Thomas Paine’s writings aroused men to action like no others,
inspiring them to change their lives, their governments, their kings, and even
their gods.
Q: Anything
else we should know?
A: Yes,
indeed. When 37-year-old Thomas Paine arrived in America, the first friend he
made was Dr. Benjamin Rush, whom he met in a Philadelphia book store, where
they chatted and discussed their views on British rule. With encouragement from
Rush, Paine began writing an essay, showing it to Rush at various stages of its
development, but untitled.
After Paine
had written that “nothing…could be more absurd” than giving power over others
to a man simply because he was first-born in a particular household, Rush
agreed, suggesting that Paine call his essay "Common Sense." It became the
best-selling publication in history after the Bible, with George Washington
declaring it the most influential document in convincing Americans to fight for
independence.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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