| Dr Henry Jeanneret M.D. L.S.A. L.R.C.S. |
| 1802 - 1886 |
"In the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries of Australian colonisation the discipline of dentistry as we know it today was an uncommon one. The medical men (all men!) of the First Fleet undertook dental extractions as part of a doctor's normal surgical duties; and the management of dental and maxillo-facial injuries was part of their routine professional lives.
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One of the early colonial surgeons in Sydney, Dr Henry Jeanneret, had a special interest in dentistry. When he was 28 years of age, he published in Sydney in 1830 the first paper on dentistry in Australia. Entitled "Hints on the Preservation of the Teeth", it dealt with a subject of neglected health that was of singular importance to all in the Colony - soldiers, convicts and free settlers alike. Although other doctors - had published letters on preventive and public health in the Colonial newspapers as early as 1804, Jeanneret's privately published booklet was one of the first preventive health books, dental or medical, published in this country.
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Henry Jeanneret was born in London on New Years Eve, 1802. When he was 15 years of age he was apprenticed to a surgeon in Oxford. His practical training in surgery and the rural life of surrounding Oxfordshire were to stand him in good stead in his professional life across the world, particularly in the outposts of the penal colony at Port Arthur and the Aborigines' Establishment on Flinders Island in Bass Strait. He was to make significant contributions to both medicine and natural history in his future professional life in Sydney and Tasmania during the convict era; and he was to be a performer at the centre of events which were to see the tragic demise of the Tasmanian Aboriginals."
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The above extract is taken from a paper entitled "ORAL HISTORY - MEMORIALS TO THREE PIONEER AUSTRALIAN DENTISTS" by Gael Erica Phillips and John Hemsley Pearn. The paper was read at the Biennial National Conference of the Australian Society for the History of Medicine, February 10-14, 1993 Hobart, Australia. |
Chronological precis of the life of Dr Henry Jeanneret
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After practising in London till 1828, Dr Henry Jeanneret applied for a post in Australia but was recommended for a land grant in proportion to his capital under the "Land Regulations Act of 1827". Reluctant to sell out before certain that the colonial climate would suit him, he was assured at the Colonial Office that he could visit Sydney and reserve land while he returned to England to sell his property. Confirmation of these negotiations was given by Sir George Murray in 1828. With a letter of introduction from Sir Richard Dundas to Governor Arthur, he departed England on the brig "Tranmere" with the intention of setting up practice in either Sydney or Hobart Town. He arrived in Van Diemans Land on 12th. November 1829 from where he proceeded to Sydney, arriving in December 1829. On arriving in Sydney, he applied for a reserve grant but was told that he must take out a bond for five hundred pounds to remain in the colony for three years. Protesting against this condition he established a practice as a surgeon and dentist. It was during this time that Dr Jeanneret wrote the first book on dentistry in Sydney, 'Hints for the Preservation of Teeth' (1830). Dr Jeanneret had a very keen sense of preventive medicine and particularly of the prevention of dental ill health. He publicly advocated, in his book, general rules for the preservation of the teeth. He advocated daily brushing of the teeth and gave practical illustrations in lay terms how a toothbrush might be used. He advocated a dentifrice of charcoal mixed with chalk and powdered cinnamon. He advocated that a silken thread might be used for flossing the teeth. Chapters in his book dealt with Teething, Shedding of Teeth, General Rules for the Preservation of the Teeth, Diseases, Decay, Toothache Remedies, Diseases of the Gums and the subject of Artificial Teeth and Palates. During those first five years in New South Wales Dr Jeanneret took a great interest in everything tending towards the advancement of the colony. He was a strong advocate of the establishment of Schools of Art and his lectures on scientific subjects helped to develop the resources of the colony. In 1831 he was active in dysentery epidemic. On the 11th December 1832 he married Harriet Merrit of Sydney, sister of the wife of the late Mr Francis Mitchell. They were married at St James's Church. Their first son, Charles Edward was born on the 9th May, 1834. Not enjoying the climate due to 'being by day eaten up by flies and by night by mosquitoes', Dr Jeanneret requested a transfer to Van Diemans Land. He gave notice of his intention to leave Sydney for Van Diemans Land in the following notice which appeared in The Australian Newspaper 8th November 1832: Dr Jeanneret begs to inform friends and public that he proposes leaving NSW shortly and requests those requiring his assistance as a dentist to make early application having been obliged to disappoint many persons on leaving for Van Diemans Land. Clarence St, Sydney, New South Wales 8th October 1832. It was not until 1834 that Dr Jeanneret and family sailed from Sydney for Hobart Town. On arrival he established a medical practice at 31 Murray Street, Hobart Town where he practiced until the end of 1837. 1835 saw the start of a long winded attempt by Dr Jeanneret to obtain land which he understood, before leaving England, would be made available upon application. He duly lodged an application with the NSW Government on 24th March 1835 which was evidenced in a note from Sir George Murray to General Darling and an enclosed memo from Mr Ferguson. A number of communications concerning Dr Jeanneret's land claim were made between Secretary of State Spring Rice, Sir George Murray, General Darling and Lord Glenelg, but were of no avail. A letter from Government House dated 27th October 1835 stated that "Dr Jeanneret appears to labour under a misconception in supposing that there was an intention to except him from the operation of any established rules. No record of any instruction to that effect having been transmitted to General darling." On the 25th January 1836 the claim was dismissed in a terse letter from Government House with the words: "This department unable to trace any application on papers authorising same." The following year, 1837, Dr Jeanneret's wife Harriet gave birth to a daughter Frances Charlotte Elizabeth in Sydney. Two months and eleven days after her birth, on the return voyage from Sydney to Hobart Town, Frances died. Her tombstone is set in a wall at St Davids Park, Hobart. In 1838 Dr Jeanneret relinquished his medical practice in Hobart Town to take up an appointment in Service of the Crown as Medical and Spiritual Charge of Point Puer, Port Arthur. The settlement at Point Puer was a prison where many hundreds of boys aged from eight to twenty years old, who had been transported from Great Britain, were kept. Dr Jeanneret did much to alleviate the hardships that the boys endured. The system of securing the juvenile prisoners to a triangle and flogging with the cat'o'nine tails in the presence of all their comrades was deeply opposed by Dr Jeanneret and eventually abolished during his tenure at Point Puer. Apparently, during his time at Point Puer, Dr Jeanneret fell foul with Captain Charles O'Hara Booth which was to prove detrimental for him in his later appointments. Having incurred the displeasure of the authorities by his leniency, Dr Jeanneret was forced to abandon his charge and returned to medical practice in Hobart Town where he practiced until 1842. Jeanneret's clinical skills as a surgeon and dentist, together with the bureaucratic controversies in which he was eternally embroiled, have overshadowed his work as a botanist. He was interested in botany generally, but particularly in seaweeds and other marine plants. He corresponded with two of the great doctor botanists of his era, Professor William Henry Harvey, Keeper of the Dublin Herbarium and subsequently with botanists in both England and Scotland. He sent specimens of marine algae from Port Arthur to Dr Hooker in London and the new genus Jeannerettia was named, in 1847, "in dedication ... to Dr Jeanneret of Tasmania, from whom we have received a number of interesting algae, gathered at Port Arthur, and among them the first specimens we have seen of this new remarkable plant". Jeanneret's name is well known in the world of botany. His eternal memorial is the name of the beautiful red cold water algae, Jeannerettia pedicellata and Jeannerettia lobata. These delicate red seaweeds, with their glowing colours, are common in the seaborne drift of the southern shores of Australia. There is a drawing of the type specimen, sent from Port Arthur in Tasmania by Dr Henry Jeanneret in 1838. Drawn by another doctor-botanist, Dr William Henry Harvey, it features in Harvey's "Nereis Australia", published in 1847, with acknowledgments." Given the displeasure of the authorities at Jeanneret's performance at Point Puer it is curious that in 1842 he was appointed to the Aborigine Settlement "Wybalena" on Flinders Island as Protector of Aborigines, Surgeon and Commandant and Justice of the Peace, by the hand of Governor Sir John Franklin. Perhaps it was Jeanneret's reputation as "... a brilliant medical officer who had a vast knowledge of the treatment of dysentery" that motivated this appointment at a time when Aboriginal mortality at Flinders Island was high. Regardless of the reasons for his appointment, he was to take charge at "Wybalena" at a very low point in the history of the demise of the Tasmanian Aboriginal people. According to Bonwick, the historian, "After departure of Robinson from Flinders Island and his failure to have Natives transferred to Port Phillip the aborigines sank into an apathy from which they never emerged." |
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![]() Aboriginal settlement "Wybalena" at Blackmans Cove, Flinders Island 1847 |
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"Captain Smith officiated for a time then a Mr. Fisher but Dr. Jeanneret received the appointment of Superintendent who like his benevolent and learned lady was ever interested in the condition of the Blacks." Of the two hundred natives originally relocated to the Settlement on Flinders Island, there were only fifty two surviving when Jeanneret took up command of the Settlement. These consisted of twelve married couples, eleven single men, six single women and eleven children in various stages of ill health. "On arrival at Wybalena, Dr. Jeanneret was much shocked at the Islands affairs. He found the rations inadequate for his charge and even tampered with by the small military party still esteemed necessary for the safety of the Settlement." Bonwick also wrote of Jeanneret "Of an impulsive, energetic nature and highly sensitive in his conscientiousness he was led from the rebuke of wrong doing to active denunciation and was early involved in personal collision with the soldiers whom he accused of malpractices with the Natives. Engaging in voluminous correspondence with the Government , the officials long tired of the Native question and never appreciating the pertinacious exhibition of abuses preferred to get rid of the difficulty by the suspension of the Superintendent in 1844." According to Lyndall Ryan in her book "The Aboriginal Tasmanians", the Aborigines were indifferent to Jeanneret's position and his difficulties increased when two unexpected groups of Aborigines arrived - one from Port Phillip, the other from Cape Grim. They were to have a profound effect upon the establishment. Jeanneret's problems were further compounded by Clark, the catechist who has been described by Plomley as anarchistic and whose interference was mindless and destructive with a meaningless determination to cause trouble. Dr Jeanneret had determined to make the Aborigines self sufficient by allocating them plots of land for growing vegetables as well as flocks of sheep. He introduced a system of rewards for those that were prepared to work. Payment was made for work performed and profits from the sale of vegetables and wool were distributed accordingly. Typically the money earned was used to purchase treats such as tobacco, sugar and clothing. The group of Aborigines from Port Phillip undermined this system, believing that they should not have to work for such extras. It is difficult to explain the varied reports of Dr Jeanneret during his appointment to Flinders Island. On the one hand he received support from people like Dr Nixon, Bishop of Tasmania and Lady Jane Franklin, whilst on the other he was dammed by the political leaders of the day. Many historians seem supportive of his actions and dismiss the many petty quarrels with which he was embroiled. Certainly Dr Jeanneret appears to have been a tenacious opponent who did not know when to leave well enough alone. Perhaps some of the cruellest comments encountered by this writer are those found in an annotation by Governor Denison to a volume of papers concerning dealings with Dr Jeanneret in the archives of the Colonial Secretary - "The whole thing is a tissue of absurdity from end to end. If Dr Jeanneret had his deserts he would be whipped like an unruly schoolboy, and his whelp of a son as well..." Obviously tempers were frayed over the issue of the Tasmanian Aborigines which proved to be a massive blunder and disgrace to the Tasmanian Government. It should be noted that an emissary from the Government, Matthew Curling Friend, spent three weeks at the settlement investigating claims against Dr Jeanneret. Friend had previously been a member of two boards of enquiry into affairs at the settlement. Without going into the details of Friends findings, Plomley writes "The minutes of the evidence taken by Friend contain many statements in favour of Jeanneret - and none supporting Clark which can be held to be unbiased - but so much black had been applied to Jeanneret's image that any application of a different colour could not stick." Dr Jeanneret's whelp of a son, Charles Edward, in later years (1885) was described in the book "Australian Men of Mark" "As a public spirited and enterprising citizen, and Alderman both of his own suburb and of the City Council, and later as a member of the Legislative Assembly, he is in many worthy respects an acknowledged representative man." On the 21st November 1843 Dr Jeanneret was dismissed. He returned to Hobart Town to plead his case and also resumed his medical practice at 31 Murray Street, Hobart Town from September 1844 until he was reinstated at Flinders Island on the 18th February 1846. Three weeks after Jeanneret's dismissal Sir John Franklin accompanied by Lady Franklin, Dr. Nixon - Bishop of Tasmania and several officials visited Flinders Island on the 12th December 1843. The party minutely inspected the establishment. It appears that the visit only lasted one day as evidenced by a letter from Lady Franklin to Mrs Jeanneret dated the following day 13th December from aboard the "Flying Fish". "Dear Mrs Jeanneret, We shall remember our visit to you with much interest and pleasure and I beg you to accept my earnest wishes for your improved health and strength and for your future welfare. With kind compliments to Dr. Jeanneret. Believe me dear Mrs Jeanneret. Very truly yours, Jane Franklin." On his return to Hobart, Dr Jeanneret harassed the Government seeking reasons for his dismissal and the vindication of his character. failing to receive either satisfactory replies or pecuniary compensation, he petitioned the Secretary of State in February 1845 for reinstatement and compensation. These were granted by Lord Stanley in a despatch dated 11th August 1845, who directed that "immediate measures be made to compensate Dr Jeanneret, either by restoring him to the office he has lost, with all arrears of salary; or by placing him in some other equally lucrative position with the payment of those arrears.", The soldiers on the island were withdrawn and Dr. Jeanneret was granted full control. |
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His triumph over the local authorities did not lessen the spleen of his enemies nor silence the voice of calumny and reproach.
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To quote Plomley once again, |
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The Cheltenham Examiner of the 23rd June 1886 records death of Dr Henry Jeanneret L.S.A. M.D. L.R.C.S. at Cheltenham England 17th June 1886, aged 84. Probate was granted to his widow Frances Anne Jeanneret. It may be some satisfaction for him to know that, a dozen years after, his name was spoken of with respect by the Natives. Even one of them, who had before opposed him, declared him to be a just and good man; and another asserted that he kept the bad men from troubling them there, and that they were far happier on Flinders than ever they had been since. Further information and records from this date are hard to find owing to destruction of Church, Parish, and Shire records through bombing during World War 2. Henry Jeanneret's wife Harriett apparently died and the children returned to Australia. Charles Edward the eldest went to the goldfields and later to Sydney where he became prominent in public life, Charlotte Sarah to a nursing profession in Sydney and other sons died at an early age. The following extract is from "THE AUSTRALIAN CHURCHMAN" Friday, July 2nd 1886 By cable the death of Henry Jeanneret M.D., is announced. Though Dr. Jeanneret removed with his family from Sydney to Tasmania in 1836, he, with his amiable wife will be remembered with respect and affection by friends. Amongst the oldest colonists still living, Dr. Jeanneret, after pursuing his studies at Oxford, Paris and London graduated at Edinburgh, emigrated to Sydney, and commenced the practice of his profession here in 1829. When in Sydney, he took great interest in everything tending to the advancement of the colony, and by his advocacy of the establishment of Schools of Art and his lectures on scientific subjects helped to develop the resources of the colony. Amongst other things he discovered gold in quartz on the property of the Australian Agricultural Company, near Stroud, and duly reported its discovery, but as it was only ascertained by chemical analysis, and the quantity was small, it was not regarded by the Company as a discovery of any importance. In 1832, Dr. Jeanneret married Miss Merritt, sister of the wife of the late Mr Francis Mitchell. He entered the service of the Crown in Tasmania, and occupied various responsible positions, until he returned to England with his family in 1850. When at the Council Settlements at Port Arthur, Dr Jeanneret had the medical and spiritual charge of the settlement at Point Puer, a prison where many hundreds of boys, of from eight to twenty years old, who had been transported from Great Britain, many of whom for the most trivial offences, were kept. Dr Jeanneret did much to alleviate the condition of the boys. The system of flogging with the cat-of-nine tails on a triangle erected for that purpose, in the presence of all their comrades was vehemently opposed by him, and consequently abandoned. He afterwards, when Commandant of Flinders Island and protector of the aborigines of Tasmania, reversed the policy of cruelty and coercion practiced there, and substituted one of kindness and freedom, but his efforts were of little avail. Old ideas of justice and punishment were too strongly rooted in official minds, and the poor aborigines were removed from the beautiful and free settlement and hunting grounds of Flinders Island to the wretched old penal settlement at Oyster Cove, Tasmania where they speedily died. Dr. Jeanneret, during his service, always made a point of devoting the early and late portions of the Lord's Day to his medical duties, but the principal portion of the day was devoted to the honour of God by conducting His worship and in giving religious instruction, when at Point Puer, under the sanction of the late revered Bishop of Australia. |
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