Little more than a month after the death of Martha Taylor, another English friend of the Brontës, Julia Wheelwright, died in
Brussels, on 17 November 1842. She was only seven years old. Again Winifred Gérin,
without giving any evidence, attributed it to cholera, and again it certainly
is not true. There was no cholera in the city, nor another serious contagious
disease. It is just another Gérin lie.
For any day the names of the registered deaths
in Brussels were given by the newspapers, with their age and address. This had
started in April, and from it we can gather that none of the boarders of the
Pensionnat Héger died while the Brontës were staying there in 1842. It is an
indication that the sanitary circumstances at the school will not have been
that poor. The total number of deaths in November was barely higher than in
October: 295, a relatively low figure.
Julia was at a still rather more
vulnerable age. On the 30th of October she had reached the age of seven. She had thus only just reached the
stage of getting mentioned by name in the newspapers’ lists of the city’s registered deaths. Had she
died three weeks earlier she wouldn’t have made it to the newspapers, but would
only have been listed as one of those children under the age of 7 that had
died.
From L’Indépendant, 21 November 1842, with the death of Julia |
We know nothing of her last days, which makes
it rather difficult to try to assess the cause of her death. Charlotte and
Emily had already left Brussels, following the news of their Aunt Branwell’s
severe illness. An analysis of what we do know helps quite a lot though, to get
to a good educated guess. As with Martha, a main question is whether or not it
could have been a contagious disease.
The typhus theory
Joseph Green in his 1916 Wheelwright article stated that Julia “contracted typhus or typhoid fever at the Pensionnat
Héger.” He also wrote that “our aunt, Fanny Wheelwright, informed us that the
sanitation of the school was of a primitive and wholly inadequate character,
and this may account for the death of the youngest child, Julia Wheelwright, of
typhus, or typhoid fever.”
Typhus and typhoid fever are caused by the
consumption of drinking water or milk, or eating food contaminated by the
salmonella bacteria. It can also be caused by getting into contact with
defecation from someone who has got the disease. But there is no reason to
believe such contaminated drinks or food were served at the Pensionnat, also because
there are no indications that other girls fell (seriously) ill. Poor sanitation
helps to spread the disease but it isn’t the cause.
Besides, Julia was not a boarder at the
school. After lessons had ended she went back to the Hôtel Cluysenaar, where the
Wheelwrights were living. It may also be the case that Fanny compared the
sanitation at the Pensionnat with the general state of sanitation half a
century later. By 1900 vast improvements had been made in creating more
hygienic living standards. The water closet should especially be mentioned
here. It had been invented before 1842 but very few people had one in that year.
Sixty years later many people had a water closet.
The most important part of what Fanny said
is perhaps that it was a sort of fever. As Julia will have eaten and drunk the
same as her sisters any other sort of drinks or food poisoning can be excluded,
as well as typhus really. So here again, the question is what it could have
been that killed Julia, when it was obviously not a case of a contagious
disease, or at least something that would have affected her sisters too, or
other girls at the Pensionnat, who had consumed the same drinks and food. To
answer this it is first useful to have a look at the deaths of this month.
The deaths of November
This information also make a good analysis
of the ages of death possible. A good many of them of November are included in
this survey, as well as some deaths from surrounding towns like Ixelles and
Molenbeek. It is quite shocking as always to see that more than 40% were
children of seven years and younger.
Age category/number of deaths
0-6
96
7 5
8-16
6
17-20
4
21-26
11
27-36
15
37-46
20
47-56
16
57-66
22
67-76
23
77-86
13
87-93 2
The figures show that when having reached
the age of 8 there was not much chance anymore of dying soon. Having reached
the age of 20 brings a higher risk, perhaps because of appendicitis, which
appears to hit men and women in their 20s and 30s especially. Statistically at
least one would assume that Martha Taylor certainly wasn’t the only one to probably
get killed by it.
It is interesting to note that
between 16 and 19 November in Brussels itself the death toll of children aged
seven or younger (15) was almost twice as high as that of people older than 7
(8).
The weather
The Brussels weather of
November may be a good explanation. It was a cold
month, with freezing nights, according to the highly valuable records of the
Observatoire Royal. On the four days before Julia died a lot of rain had
fallen. Before that there was a fierce storm that raged for two days, between
11 and 13 November. The children may
already have caught a cold, before getting soaked wet. The latter alone though,
in combination with cold weather especially, could already be fatal for a young
child. It would certainly lead to a feverish condition. In the end, as a result
then, it was probably pneumonia that caused her death. There was nothing that
could be done against that.
We will never know of course, but this is
at least a plausible scenario, as opposed to any sort of contagious disease. It
also seems unfair therefore to blame the Pensionnat for any role in
contributing to Julia’s death. It may have been the weather, and a cold virus
that killed poor Julia, or at least contributed to it.
In a later article we will
have a look at the health situation in general in Brussels, and compare it with
other places. It can already be pointed out that the relative number of dead
children under 7 in Brussels appears to be quite the same as in Haworth in 1850,
as mentioned in the Babbage report, often quoted in Brontë literature, and seen as alarming. It appears that
it did not matter much where you lived, there was a 30 to 50% chance of dying
before reaching the age of about 6. A quite large part of these however
consisted of babies.
Julia may thus have just been
very unlucky, having almost reached a quite safe age, with the weather of her
last week. She won’t be forgotten though. “She was a
great favourite in the Héger establishment, “Joseph Green said, “and was much
caressed by the principals, pupils, and staff.” In 1916 the
Wheelwright family still had some mementoes of her, including a lock of hair,
which her mother had cut off on the day of the funeral. They’re probably lost
though now. The Brontë Parsonage
Museum has a few great Wheelwright Brussels memorabilia, but apparently nothing
from Julia, let alone that lock of hair.
Eric Ruijssenaars
No comments:
Post a Comment