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Edward G. Miner Library

History of Medicine Exhibits: Current Exhibit

Healing Waters: Women in Water-Cures of 19th Century New York

Healing Waters explores the significant contributions of women to the water-cure movement of nineteenth-century New York. During this transformative era, water-cure—a set of therapeutic treatments using water for healing—gained popularity as an alternative to conventional medicine. This practice offered opportunities for more accessible and empowering medical care, particularly for women, who played pivotal roles as practitioners, patients, and advocates.

In a time when women's opportunities in the medical field were severely limited, water-cure establishments offered a unique avenue for female healers to emerge and thrive. These women not only advanced the practice of hydrotherapy but also challenged societal norms—advocating for reform in health, hygiene, and women's rights. Their efforts laid the groundwork for future generations of women in medicine and public health.

Through materials from the Edward C. Atwater American Popular Medicine Collection, this exhibit sheds light on the water-cure establishments women helped to found, grow, and maintain, and their involvement in the connected realms of health and social reform.


“Woman's sphere cannot be very much elevated, until she learns and claims her first great rightthe right to health.”

Harriet N. Austin

Exhibit Items

“Awful Appearance of the Allopathic Doctor” and “Pleasant Appearance of the Water-Cure Doctor.” The Water-Cure Journal XIII (1852 June): 139.

The Water-Cure Journal was the principal organ of the hydropathic movement in America.  Throughout the serial’s lifespan (1845-1862), it was edited by two of the most influential hydropathic advocates in the United States: Joel Shew (1816-1855) and Russell Thacher Trall (1812-1877).  This mass-circulation monthly proved that hydropathic literature was an effective vehicle for health reform and a variety of related, and unrelated, causes: temperance, dress reform, vegetarianism, women’s rights, abolition, etc.

Water-cure physicians, such as Trall and Shew, as well as the movement’s followers, were discouraged by the allopathic medical school’s reliance on powerful drugs—“poison”, according to hydropaths—and copious bleeding.  The literature and teachings of American hydropathy taught that allopathic doctors were to be feared and water-cure doctors to be trusted, as seen in the displayed cartoons.

Supplemental Items

H. T. Trall. "The Vapor Bath." The Water-Cure Journal XXX (1860 August): 32.

This article includes a description of how to create vapor baths at home when one's house or water-cure establishment is without water pipes or heat--a "cheap and convenient apparatus." Although water-cure establishments are the focus of much of this exhibit, the practice was intended to be accessible to all, even those who could not afford or access stays at institutes.

Supplemental Items