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Going Back to Warm Springs
by Carolyn Raville
Inseparable as a
team as they are as husband and wife, Jerry & Carolyn Raville began the
Polio Post News in 1985 (named by her daughter, Shirley), while living in Miami,
Florida, where they had already founded their first post-polio support group.
After moving to Dunnellon, in southern Marion County, they met the highly
respected orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Burton W. Marsh, who encouraged Carolyn to
found another group, which she and Jerry did in 1990: the North Central Florida
Post-Polio Support Group. The Polio Post News has continued to be an
extension of that group and today reaches around the world. In 1999, the Polio
Post News went internet, and in July, 2000, finally came to be known as "PostPolioSupport.com."
My
husband, Jerry, and I celebrated our 37th anniversary in May with a
visit to Warm Springs, Georgia. And believe
me… it didn’t take a twist of our arms to get us to accept the invitation
from Dr. Anne Gawne to visit the Warm Springs FDR Support Group. We got to hear
their special speaker, Dr. Frederick M. Maynard of the Upper Peninsula Medical
Center in Marquette, Michigan. Since it was our anniversary, Jerry and I said, "Well,
why NOT take a trip ‘back to the future?’" It turned out to be a
trip we will long remember; it was beyond all expectations.
It became obvious we hadn’t been out of Florida in entirely too long,
because as we approached Manchester, just a few miles from Warm Springs and Pine
Mountain, my ears started popping. And I had forgotten how red the clay dirt was
in Georgia. Then I heard a train in the distance and I couldn’t help thinking
about the man we called "Dr. Roosevelt" and his last trip to his
beloved Little White House. In fact, a whole flood of memories came back to me.
I remembered after learning to walk, as a treat on the weekend, we could ride to
Manchester on the bus to a special drugstore with a lunch counter and order a
milk shake and a cheeseburger. This was the very first milkshake and
cheeseburger I ever had and they tasted so good to me then that I have loved
through the years and to this very day! Sadly, I could not find the drugstore
nor could I even remember the name of it.
Leaving Manchester, we
approached Warm Springs Village and then Roosevelt’s Warm Springs. As we
turned into the foundation I got a big lump in my throat, but it was a good
lump, because this was just like going back home after so many years away.
Another memory came to me as I thought back to my first arrival at Warm Springs…
a little girl on a stretcher in an ambulance. All I could see then was two large
brick columns with a sign overhead reading "Welcome to Warm Springs."
I had a lump in my throat then, too, but it was a different lump because I had
no idea what was ahead for me, what kind of treatment, or how long would I be
there. All I knew was that I wanted walk again and even dance, and I did
fulfill those goals later!
Jerry and I followed the signs
to the parking lot in front of Georgia Hall. Georgia Hall was one of the first
buildings erected on the grounds in 1933. The way I remember Georgia Hall, as
you entered from the parking lot and look to your right, at the end of the hall
was a beautiful, elegant dining room with square tables covered in white linen
tablecloths and while linen napkins. The waiters all wore bowties and served
each person. The dining room where Roosevelt traditionally held his Thanksgiving
dinners for his friends and fellow polio patients is now a cafeteria. At the far
end of Georgia Hall was a post office, gift shop, and entrance to Builders Hall
for the boys. The post office is now the information desk and personnel office.
I have many fond memories of
Georgia Hall. It was the place to play games, meet your friends, and wait for
mail. It’s where the tall Christmas tree was placed for the Holidays and its
where we sang carols. It is also where Dr. Irwin played Santa! I remembered the
"push boys" loading us on the bus for special events in the area, as
well as our daily trips to the pools for therapy. In the entrance foyer everyone’s
crutches and canes hung on pegs. During cold or rainy weather we would have
"walking" in Georgia Hall instead of the outside walking court.
As you exit by the door nearest
the information desk in Georgia Hall, you will find to your left, Kress Hall.
It
was built in 1935 as housing for the girls once they could walk or use a
wheelchair. Kress Hall is where Jerry and I stayed for our 3-day visit this past
May. We actually used a room just a few doors down the hall from where I stayed
as a patient. Memories continued to flow. In this very room Jerry and I
were now staying in, a missionary lived as a polio patient; she conducted Sunday
School for the kids who chose to attend. I recalled Iris Keim from Illinois, who
was my first roommate. She moved to Miami with her family and we met again in
the support group there. Iris took over as president of the group when Jerry and
I moved to Dunnellon. Others I remembered included Jean Schemberg, Mildred
Monyham, Josette Harta, Connie Heather and Sue Smith. I wonder where they are
today and how well they are doing. And, oh, how I remember "Ma" Isabel
Harding, our house mom. She always reminded me to rest, rest and rest some more.
I do wish I had listened to her more!
Wheeling on down the walkway
from Kress Hall, there used to be cottages, but they’ve been replaced by other
buildings now. Circle on around and you’ll find yourself at the Campus
Pool Building. It was built in 1942 and is still be used today for daily
therapy. Continue on around the circle and you’ll see the Norman Wilson
Building. It was built as the first infirmary in 1928 in memory of a young
Philadelphia polio patient, stricken by acute appendicitis. He was taken
by ambulance to Atlanta where he died in a hospital. Today, his memorial
serves as the pharmacy. The north wing was built in 1939 as a complete
orthopedic hospital for polio patients. This really brought back memories
of the early 1940s and my first day at Warm Springs.
When I first arrived at Warm
Springs I had a complete medical and muscle evaluation by Dr. C.E. Irwin and a
therapist. Then I was sent to the casting room and wrapped in a full body
cast and rolled out on to the sundeck to dry. My mother had to return to
Athens, Georgia, and for the first time in my life I experienced
homesickness. It only lasted a couple of days because the spirit of cheer,
optimism and friendship among survivors and staff was infectious and
rampant! New arrivals soon developed a splendid mental attitude.
Another of those memories: Being
in a full body cast, they had to watch our weight-gain very carefully. I
was put on a low calorie diet. Now, we had excellent food, but on Sundays
it was always the same Sunday dinner… one half of a broiled chicken. I really
disliked chicken at that time so after the nurse was out of sight (and I hope
none of them ever read this!) I would throw my chicken over to my
roommate. Of course, she had to throw back the bones so no one would catch
on to our little ruse. That was a lot of Sunday chicken some one ate for
me, since I remained in the hospital for two months before moving to Kress Hall.
I had private schooling while in
the hospital, too. My teacher, Virginia Shipp, also a polio survivor,
would come to my room daily. When I came out of my cast I had splints,
corset, was fitted in special shoes and began pool therapy even before I began
to sit up in my wheelchair. I learned to wheel my chair quickly and knew
about many hiding places to keep from going back to bed.
Near Georgia Hall was the
Playhouse where motion pictures were shown three times a week. The films
were contributed by various motion picture companies. The playhouse was
also used for amateur theatricals. I was sad to find that the playhouse
was replaced by other building, but I guess progress marches on. The
hospital is now used to house nursing and medical administrative offices, the
admissions department, and the outpatient clinic.
Coming out of the former
hospital’s glass doors at the center of the north wing, I walked on to the
Walking Court. Now it was time for tears of joy, because this had not
changed. It was just like I left it those years ago and for a moment I
relived one of the happiest moments of my life. Just seven months after I
was stricken with poliomyelitis, I took my first step on this very Walking
Court. I stood on this very spot! I visualized every detail of that
day as all of my friends at Warm Springs, sitting on the sidelines in the grass,
my mother and aunt included, cheered me on! (My mother had been told it
was most doubtful I would ever walk again, but they forgot that this little girl
said she would not only walk, she would one day dance, too!) I was on
crutches, with a push boy behind me, a therapist on each side of me and in front
of me. All I could think was, "Let me do it MY way!"
They tried very hard to slow me down, stand me straight, but I had a certain
pace and tilt and once they slowed me, I would fall. I had to learn the stairs
backwards, but what a day!!
Going back through Georgia Hall
to the parking lot Jerry and I followed the covered walkways just behind Builder’s
Hall to the schoolhouse. This building was built in 1939 and was the gift
of Mrs. S. Pinkney Tuck. The building was equipped for occupational therapy and
for class teaching, as well as several smaller rooms for individual
tutoring. It also had a complete library for the use of the students in
school, and we were all encouraged to read. The school house is now where the
FDR Support Group meets. This is where we had the opportunity and pleasure
to hear Dr. Maynard’s presentation to the research doctors at the conference
on "Identifying Best Practices in Diagnosis and Care."
Later, we visited the treatment
pools that FDR and polio patients from all over the world spent many happy hours
in… swimming, playing, and …oh, yes… treatment therapy, too! The
pools and their accessory buildings had provisions for physical therapy in the
natural warm mineral springs and heliotherapy (treatment by exposure to
sunlight). The pools are no longer in use because the now-required
filtering systems cannot be fitted to them.
It was because FDR found
personal improvement as he swam in the Warm Springs pool that it became a
turning point for polio’s everywhere. It was there that this man with
means and a deep concern for the underprivileged and those suffering from polio,
decided to fulfill a dream. Without even hesitating or looking back, he
poured over two-thirds of his own personal wealth into something he knew would
make life better for many. The Georgia Warm Springs Foundation was founded
in 1927. Polio patients from all over the world began coming to Warm
Springs for treatment.
During
all the years Roosevelt had been coming to Warm Springs, he stayed in various
summer cottages, but during his term as Governor of New York he had plans drawn
for the building of what would later be known as the Little White House on a
beautiful site overlooking a deep and wooded ravine. The home was
completed in the spring of 1932. This home featured simplicity, and he
loved it more than his other two homes. It was, in fact, a symbol of his
life and philosophy. He spent many of his happiest days there and he died
in the home he loved on April 12, 1945. He was exhausted not only from the
burdens of office and World War Two, but with the after affects of polio.
We were told to rest and preserve our energies. He could not.
Jerry and I toured the Little
White House for the first time while in Warm Springs. We felt very special
meeting Steve Layne, who is a tour guide at the Little White House, and Suzanne
Pike, who lived all her life in Warm Springs and was a patient at the age of 8
months. We enjoyed reminiscing about people Suzanne and I knew. After
walking through the history of Roosevelt’s home with Steve and the history of
the foundation, we found ourselves driving up Pine Mountain in hopes of seeing
the sunset. It turned out to be too cloudy to enjoy the sunset but the
view was breathtaking. We definitely could feel "the Spirit of Warm
Springs," and the feeling of love, hope and peace was present, too.
The efforts of Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, a remarkable man who encouraged independence, has benefited thousands
of people who are physically challenged and continues to do so through his
legacy.
I hope that you find that same
Spirit alive in the North Central Florida Post-Polio Support Group. After
all, it was the dream of a little girl years ago that a group would someday be
founded to give hope and love to other polio survivors in future years.
That dream began outside of Georgia Hall many years ago while looking at the
moon and dreaming.
I am happy Jerry and I had the
opportunity to go back in time. It was, as the kids say,
"awesome!" Warm Springs is one of the largest post-polio clinics
in the United States today, and I understand plans are being made for April
12-15, 2001, for a Warm Springs Foundation Reunion for the foundation
alumni. Be watching for further information.
As we said, it was on April 12,
1945, during FDR’s 41st visit to the small rural community of 500,
he suffered the massive stroke that caused his death. During that last
visit his portrait was being painted but it was never finished. Today, the
"Unfinished Portrait" is a focal point of the Little White House tour.
Ten years later to the day of
FDR’s death, April 12, 1955, the world heard over the wires of the Associated
Press: "The Salk polio
vaccine is safe, effective and potent, it was announced today."
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