I think of the one we saw at the steam fair,
way back in September 2010, but this book it is not wall, but Walls of Death, back in
1874 by Dr. Robert M. Kedzie, a Union surgeon during the American Civil War who
later became a professor of chemistry, knew something that many people did not, the arsenic in the wallpaper on their walls could make them ill and even kill them! knowing this he published a book, Shadows from the Walls of Death: Facts and Inferences Prefacing a Book of Specimens of Arsenical Wall Papers, of its 100 or so pages, 86 are just samples of arsenic-pigmented wallpaper that people used to decorate their homes during those times. Even though arsenic was a known toxin capable of killing a person if ingested, no one imagined it could kill even when used as an active ingredient to make wallpaper colours more vibrant. Kedzie did,
at the end of the 19th century, about 65 percent of all
wallpaper in the United States contained arsenic, and Dr. Kedzie already knew
something that would later become scientific fact – that, over time, the
wallpaper-decorated walls released this poison that slowly killed inhabitants, arsenic ended up in the air, in food, on people’s hands, it made them sick, and
sometimes killed them, as part of an effort to raise awareness about the mortal
danger of arsenic-laden wallpaper, Robert M. Kedzie produced 100 copies of
Shadows from the Walls of Death and sent them out to public libraries
across Michigan, along with a note explaining the purpose of the book and a
warning to librarians not to let children touch the pages,
out of the original 100 copies of this amazing book, only a handful are still around today. Two
remained in Michigan, Dr. Kedzie’s home state (one at Michigan State University
and the other at the University of Michigan), one ended up at Harvard
University Medical School and the fourth is at the National Library of
Medicine, which also scanned it and made it available online, handling and even storing copies of the Shadows from the
Walls of Death is a challenging affair. Before having each page encapsulated in
plastic film, in 1998, the copy at MSU could only be touched by people wearing
special gloves. There were all kinds of restrictions regarding the period of
time it could be left out for, and people had to be careful not to touch
anything else while wearing the gloves, let alone lick their fingers, as an aside it was thought for a time that the arsenic in the wallpaper of Napoleon's prison killed him, but this theory was later disproved.
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