DOROTHEA l. DIX
A.D. 1802-1887
One of the most
wonderful women of the
nineteenth century was
Dorothea L. Dix. Though
she was a frail and
overworked woman, she
had a gentle, loving
disposition, but with a
will like steel. She
worked hard against
apathy and other fearful
odds while working for
the betterment of the
imprisoned and mentally
ill, and she never once
failed.
Dorothea was born at
Hampden, Maine the
daughter of Mary Bigelow
and Joseph Dix. Her
family passed down a
strong social conscious
to the young girl along
with an interest in
healing and
philanthropy.
Born into a family of
modest means, she helped
support her family by
running a school for
young children in Boston
when she was nineteen
years old, and over the
next few years published
several children's
books. Illness forced
her to close the school,
and in an attempt to
restore her health she
went on an lengthy trip
to England. There she
came to know many
English reformers, and
began to take interest
in humanitarian causes.
By the late 1830’s
Boston, where she now
lived, was full of
humanitarian people.
Dorothea was among those
who wanted to better
society. In 1841,
hearing that a
Sunday-school teacher
was needed in the East
Cambridge House of
Correction, she
volunteered to teach a
class of twenty women
who were criminals and
drunkards.
When she visited the
jail she found some
mentally ill people
confined in unheated
rooms. In order to
correct the abuse she
witnessed, Dorothea had
to bring the matter into
court. Armed with a
shocking array of facts,
she petitioned the
legislature “in behalf
of the insane paupers
confined within the
Commonwealth in cages,
closets, cellars,
stalls, pens; chained,
naked, beaten with rods
and lashed into
obedience.” Because of
her efforts, these
abuses were largely
corrected in
Massachusetts,
encouraging her to
undertake reform in
other states. New
Jersey was her next
field, where by careful
investigation and wise
presentation, she won
victories for the insane
and criminals.
It is amazing that in
less than four years’
work she visited and
investigated eighteen
states prisons, three
hundred county jails and
houses of correction,
and more than five
hundred almshouses.
Everywhere she met
sights which were
sickening and horrible,
but though weak in body
and at times sick, she
bravely toiled on.
Miss Dix visited Halifax
and Toronto, brought
reform to Scotland, and
visited hospitals in
Norway, Holland, Italy,
Russia, and Greece. She
awakened the slumbering
moral sense of the
people and the treatment
of the inmates of
asylums and prisons was
revolutionized.
At the outbreak of
the Civil War in
America, she gave
herself to the work of
nursing in the army and
was made chief of army
nurses. What Florence
Nightingale was to the
Crimean War, the same
was Dorothea Dix to the
Union Army during the
Civil War. She was
sixty-three years old
and weighed only
ninety-five pounds when
the war was over. She
remained in Washington
during the heat of the
summer to visit
hospitals and carry on a
vast correspondence in
her attempt to locate
missing sons, fathers,
husbands, and
sweethearts. She worked
at this until the last
weeks of 1866.
For the next fifteen
years she traveled the
country working in the
behalf of the mentally
ill. Many of the
institutions she had
helped to establish
suffered neglect during
the war, prompting her
to say: “It would seem
all my work is to be
done over.”
For the last fifty
years of her life,
Dorothea had no home and
often lived in the
quarters of the
hospitals she founded.
In 1882 she became quite
ill and after five years
of suffering she died at
Trenton Asylum, which
was offered to her as a
retreat and she lovingly
called it her “firstborn
child”. She was buried
in Mount Auburn Cemetery
near Boston.
The life of Dorothea
Lynde Dix was one of
great love and sacrifice
on behalf of mankind.
Her life was an
expression of the
Christian way of life
at its very best.