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Tag Archives: incubator babies

Incubated Babies on the Boardwalk (continued…)

13 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by tanya brassie in Atlantic City

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Atlantic City, incubator babies, Young's Pier

Dr. How's Infant Incubator

Image of "Dr. How's Electric Incubator" from 1903 similar to the ones in Atlantic City. From Library of Congress.

The first incubated babies in Atlantic City appeared on Young’s Pier in 1904. According to a New York Times article written the same year, “the ‘scientific mother’ as the incubator [had] been termed, [was] caring for seven babies.” The author also noted that “all the little tots [were] gaining strength.”

The babies were quickly a big hit. In a publication from 1908, author Gaston Lichenstein praised the exhibit, stating that “Young’s Pier offers the intellectual tourist more interesting attractions than any other…to be observed on the various piers and the famous Boardwalk.” Of these “interesting attractions” Lichenstein gushed about were the incubator babies which visitors could see for a mere quarter. Below is an excerpt from his book, A Visit To Young’s Pier Atlantic City, N.J., describing the incubators:

Four babies are being cared for by the institution on Young’s Pier. One of them, a healthy youngster of eleven pounds and four ounces, arrived on April 15th, weighing three pounds and two ounces. He is a seven months’ premature specimen. Another, that arrived on April 20th, weighing two bounds and twelve ounces, now tips the scales at eight pounds and eight ounces.
A Filipino premature baby of six months, the smallest baby on record in the world that is alive today (June 26, 1905), is twenty six days old, and weights two pounds and two ounces.
Only nature food is supplied, and the different babies are subjected to varying temperatures, from eight-five degrees upward, according to their condition.
A scale, weighing to a small fraction of an ounce, is publicly exhibited. This delicate apparatus insures accuracy. The “nursery” is enclosed in glass, so that visitors can obtain a full view of the artificial arrangements.
Three of the four infants came under my observation. The extraordinarily youthful Filipino, who is yet imperfectly developed, lies in a state of apparent obliviousness, but, a youngster about to be discharged, who now lives in the open air and who was being held by a nurse, appeared strong and healthy like any normal child. (A Visit to Young’s Pier, 4)

Young's Pier

The Boardwalk at the turn of the century. In the background, Young's Pier, where the incubator babies made their debut. From Library of Congress.

Interesting Tidbits:

On Sept. 16, 1916, The Washington Post ran an article about a Mrs. Richard Elkins who adopted a “war orphan” baby from the incubators. The baby, whose father died in WWI and mother not long after giving birth, caught the eye of Mrs. Elkins. “A frequent visitor to the incubators, [she] became deeply interested in the ‘war orphan’ with the fascinating smile.” The grandmother of the baby consented to its adoption by Mrs. Elkins who then had a priest sent to the incubators to baptize the infant.

On July 5th 1927, a fire swept through Atlantic City supposedly started by a lit cigarette carelessly thrown on the Boardwalk planks. Before the flames could be tamed, they had scorched nearly a city block on the Boardwalk between Columbia Place and Arkansas Avenue. An article from the New York Times reported that “about fourteen babies were in an incubator building on the Boardwalk, one of the places destroyed [by fire].” However, the babies in peril were rescued by physicians, nurses and good Samaritans and carted to shelter within the Shelbourne Hotel.

Washington Post Article

Display ad from The Washington Post in 1901 describing "a curiosity of advanced civilization" and promoting "Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription."

Sources:
Gason Lichenstein. A Visit to Young’s Pier at Atlantic City, N.J.: Also, When Edgecomb Was a ... - Gaston Lichtenstein - Google Books. Richmond, VA: WM Ellis Jones, 1908. http://books.google.com/books?id=EnItAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA3&dq=Young%27s+Pier+incubator&hl=en&sa=X&ei=NWjJUMeVL8rg2AWKtoH4DA&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Young%27s%20Pier%20incubator&f=false.


Special to The, Washington Post. 1916. Adopts "war orphan". The Washington Post (1877-1922), Sep 19, 1916. http://ezproxy.lib.utexas.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/145464247?accountid=7118 (accessed December 13, 2012).

Special to The New,York Times. 1927. Atlantic city fire lays block in ruins. New York Times (1923-Current file), Jul 06, 1927. http://ezproxy.lib.utexas.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/104118611?accountid=7118 (accessed December 13, 2012).

Display ad 23 -- no title. 1901. The Washington Post (1877-1922), Jul 02, 1901. http://ezproxy.lib.utexas.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/144251968?accountid=7118 (accessed December 13, 2012).

Toasty Incubated Babies

11 Tuesday Dec 2012

Posted by tanya brassie in Atlantic City

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Atlantic City, incubator babies

H009.InfantIncubatorMay311920Amuseuments

An advertisement for incubated babies found in a 1920s amusement guide from the Heston Collection at the Atlantic City Public Library. To view the library's webpage about incubator babies, click the image.

What were incubated babies doing on the Boardwalk?

plasticbaby

In the 19th century, the term premature did not have the same meaning as today. Instead, it was used liberally; any baby thought to be unusually tiny could be labeled “premature.” Babies who seemed lethargic as well as those actually dying were described in this way. In 1880 a doctor named Stephane Tarnier, drawing inspiration from chicken incubators, invented the first baby incubator. His initial incubation device held several babies who were warmed from a hot water reservoir located underneath them.

In the 1890s, a man named Alexandre Lion would become responsible for turning incubator babies into a spectacle. Lion expanded upon Tarnier’s idea, creating a more elaborate incubator with temperature controls and a ventilation system. His incubator was also more expensive, and not wanting to limit his invention to only those institutions which could afford it, he decided to charge guests admission for a glance at his incubator “storefronts”. For the Berlin Exposition of 1896, Tarnier opened a “child hatchery” that experienced great success.

incubators

Dr. Lion’s exhibit in Buffalo, NY. Image from the University of Buffalo Library. To learn more about incubators at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, click here.

At this time, incubator shows had never graced American soil. The man responsible for introducing incubator babies to Americans was Lion’s associate, Martin Couney. One of Couney’s first American exhibits was in Buffalo, NY. (According to an article from the Buffalo Express, one of the babies featured in the exhibit was actually born plastic-baby-favours-38056a_835_generalto one of the Native Americans in the fair’s, “Indian Village.” Supposedly, as the baby was christened, Native Americans danced around the incubator chanting the name of the incubator’s manufacturer, QBATA.) So, that is how the incubator babies exhibit, a weird amalgamation of showmanship and medical advancement came to America and ultimately Atlantic City until 1943 (!!).

Sources:
Baker, J. (2000). The Incubator and the Medical Discovery of the Premature Infant. Journal Of Perinatology, 20(5), 321.

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