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Sarah "Crazy Sally" Mapp (baptised 1706 – 1737) was an English lay bonesetter, who gained fame both by performing impressive bone-setting acts in Epsom and London, and by being a woman in a male-dominated profession.[1] Bone-setting was a medical practice used to manipulate and fix musculoskeletal injuries using manual force.[2] Mapp grew up in Wiltshire, England, and learned about the practice from her father, who was also a bone-setter.[3] She frequently fixed horse racing injuries, but her most famous case was fixing the spinal deformity of Sir Hans Sloane's niece.[3]

Sally Mapp
1819 etching of Mapp by George Cruikshank. Mapp holds a bone in reference to her career as a bonesetter.
Born
Sally Wallin

Baptised1706
Died1737 (1738)
NationalityEnglish
Other namesCrazy Sally
Occupationbonesetter
Spouse
Hill Mapp
(m. 1736⁠–⁠1736)
Parents
  • John Wallin (father)
  • Jenny Wallin (mother)
FamilyLavinia Fenton (sister)

Early life

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Sarah Mapp was baptized in 1706 near Wiltshire, England. She was the daughter of John and Jenny Wallin.[4] John Wallin was a bone-setter as well, and when he was unable to conduct bone setting practices, Mapp carried on and dealt with the cases, often even better than her father.[citation needed] She accordingly left him and established her own practice called 'Cracked Sally - the One and Only Bone Setter'.[3] Mapp's nickname 'Crazy Sally' came from her masculine personality and reputation for quarreling with her father and drinking.[1] Mapp could often be found wandering the country in a drunken state and shouting obscenities, which also contributed to her nickname.[1]

Mapp's sister Lavinia Fenton had a considerably different life. Lavinia Fenton played Polly Peachum in The Beggar's Opera in 1728 and later married Charles Powlett, 3rd Duke of Bolton.[4]

Practice

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Bone-setting in the 18th century was often carried out by men, specifically farriers and blacksmiths, because it required a lot of strength.[1] Mapp's career started out when she was a young girl. She served as the announcer at her father's booth during local races and fairs. When Mapp started helping her father's patients when he couldn't see them, she often performed amazing feats and treated them better than her father could. Mapp went on to start her own practice and her fame spread.[3] Around 1735, Mapp's fame for fixing decade-old dislocations and fractures brought her to Epsom. Epsom was home to a large number of wealthy families and horse-racing, which provided Mapp with many patients. Even though Mapp had a limited knowledge of anatomy, she had the strength and innate talent for putting dislocations back into place.[4]

The racing community in Epsom appreciated Mapp's work and when they found out she might leave, the town offered Mapp 100 guineas yearly to reside there and set bones in 1736.[1] While living in Epsom, she traveled to London twice a week and saw patients at the Grecian Coffee House.[1] Mapp traveled to London in style with an expensive coach and a team of four horses. She would collect the crutches of her cured patients and decorate her carriage with them.[3] At the same time, Sir Hans Sloane was also prescribing and conducting his private practice out of the Grecian Coffee House. Mapp is credited with fixing a spinal deformity on Sloane's niece, which bolstered her fame in London.[3]

Mapp consulted on and fixed multiple cases. Some of her most noteworthy cases are recorded in James Caulfied's Portraits, Memoirs, and Characters of Remarkable Persons where he recorded an account from October 21, 1736, "On Monday, Mrs. Mapp performed two extraordinary cures; one on a young lady of the Temple, who had several bones out from the knees to her toes, which she put in their proper places: and the other on a butcher, whose knee-pans were so misplaced that he walked with his knees knocking one against another. Yesterday she performed several other surprising cures; and about one set out for Epsom, and carried with her several crutches, which she calls trophies of honour."[5] At one point, some surgeons tried to fool Mapp and show that she was not skilled by sending her a healthy patient who claimed he had a damaged wrist. This test angered Mapp and she dislocated the patient's wrist and sent him back to the people who had tried to trick her.[1]

Later life

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Mapp was once mistaken for one of George II's mistresses while riding in her carriage by an angry mob.[6] She is reported to have responded to the angry mob by yelling, "Damn your blood, don't you know me? I am Mrs. Mapp, the bone-setter."[3] In August 1736, she married an abusive footman named Hill Mapp who absconded with 100 guineas of her savings. After initial confusion and anger, Mapp claimed that the money was worth losing to get rid of her husband.[1] In 1737, Mapp died in Seven Dials and was buried by the parish there.

In art

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"The Company of Undertakers", by Hogarth. Mapp is pictured at the top, center.

A song about Mapp appeared in a contemporary play at Lincoln's Inn Fields, The Husband's Relief, comparing her favorably to highly-paid London surgeons.[7] Mapp is reported to have attended the play.[4]

Her portrait appears at the top of William Hogarth's The Company of Undertakers (Consultation of Quacks) (1736), which grouped her with "quacks", but suggested that both the quacks and "professional" physicians of the day might lead to death.[8] In 1819, George Cruikshank portrayed Mapp, probably based on Hogarth's drawing.[9]

Legacy

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Originally, Mapp was well-loved wherever she worked because of her talents as a bone-setter. In Epsom, the racing community especially appreciated her contributions and named a mare Mrs. Mapp in honor of her.[5] However, towards the end of her life, she started to fall out of fame and favor. In 1736, the established medical community started to try to eliminate the "quacks" operating in London, so Mapp moved to Pall Mall. The famous artist William Hogarth depicted her in his print The Company of Undertakers. Hogarth's print only pushed her further away from fame as he chose to draw her as very masculine and ugly.[4] Hogarth's print was coupled with Sir Percivall Pott's criticism of Mapp when he called her "an immoral drunken female savage".[1] Both of these attacks on Mapp along with changing social attitudes led to her decline in popularity. This fall from fame caused Mapp to drink heavily and lose her customers. In 1737, Mapp died in Seven Dials and, due to her poverty, was buried by the parish.[1] Sarah Mapp was only alive for thirty years, but she is still well recorded in history because of her character and the fact that she was a very successful female in what was typically considered a male field.

In modern literature, Mapp is widely cited as an example of a quack.[10][11] She has been described as an early exponent of osteopathy.[12][13] Samuel Homola has noted that "In the days of Sally Mapp, the treatment appeared to be quite successful in a great many conditions because of the unrecognized effects of suggestive therapy."[14]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Mrs Mapp: The Female Bone Setter". Epsom and Ewell History Explorer. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  2. ^ Heery, Michael (2010). "Neglected practitioners: the bonesetters of early modern England" (PDF). The Local Historian. 40: 126–136.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Wright, A. Dickson (18 January 1957). "Quacks Through the Ages". Journal of the Royal Society of Arts. 105 (4995). Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce: 168–169. JSTOR 41368549.
  4. ^ a b c d e Corley, T.A.B. (2004). "Mapp, Sarah". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/56037. Retrieved 27 February 2017. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  5. ^ a b Caulfield, James (1820). Portraits, Memoirs, and Characters, of Remarkable Persons (Volume 3). London: T. H. Whiteley. pp. 70–77.
  6. ^ Gordon, Richard (1994). The Alarming History of Medicine. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 192. ISBN 0-312-10411-1.
  7. ^ Oths, Kathryn S.; Hinojosa, Servando Z. (17 October 2004). Healing by Hand: Manual Medicine and Bonesetting in Global Perspective. Rowman Altamira. pp. 239–240. ISBN 978-0-7591-1528-6.
  8. ^ Geraghty, K. (1 April 2001). "The Company of Undertakers: Satire and the Medical Profession". Virtual Mentor. 3 (4). doi:10.1001/virtualmentor.2001.3.4.mhst1-0104. PMID 23272961.
  9. ^ Hogarth, William; Cruikshank, George, Sarah Mapp. Coloured etching by G. Cruikshank, 1819, after W. Hogarth, retrieved 31 March 2017
  10. ^ Stableford, Brian. (2006). Science Fact and Science Fiction: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 294. ISBN 978-0-415-97460-8
  11. ^ Chapman, Allan. (2016). Physicians, Plagues and Progress: The History of Western Medicine from Antiquity to Antibiotics. Lion Books. pp. 335-336. ISBN 978-0-7459-6895-7
  12. ^ Soupel, Serge; Hambridge, Roger A. (1982). Literature and Science and Medicine. William Andrews Clark Memorial Library. p. 50
  13. ^ Clayton, Antony. (2003). London's Coffee Houses: A Stimulating Story. Historical Publications. p. 48. ISBN 978-0948667862
  14. ^ Homola, Samuel. (1963). Bonesetting, Chiropractic and Cultism. Critique Books. p. 20

Further reading

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  • Fitzwilliams (June 1951). "Mrs. Mapp, or crazy Sally Mapp". Med World. 74 (16): 463–6. PMID 14852318.