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Saluda Train Tales: History of Infants & Children’s Sanitarium in Saluda

August 17, 2018 @ 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

 Three grandchildren of Dr. Lesesne Smith will share how the “baby hospital” came to be in Saluda and its impact on the health of children in the South during the three decades before antibiotics became available in the 1940’s.

Nettie Sweet, VeeVee Blackshear, and Clara Carter are 3 of Lesesne’s 13 grandchildren and live in Saluda full-time. Their “careers” were as housewives, mothers and volunteers!

  1. Lesesne Smith was born in Berkeley County on July 28, 1877. He grew up in Mt. Pleasant and graduated from Porter Military Academy. He was in the first class to matriculate at Clemson. After earning his M. D. degree from the Medical College of the State of South Carolina in 1903, he practiced for several years in Newry and Great Falls, before moving to Spartanburg and limiting his practice to pediatrics.

His concern for children was great. He established the Spartanburg Baby Hospital, a charity institution, as well as his private Infant’s and Children’ s Sanatorium.

In a time of limited opportunity for continuing education for doctors, Dr. Smith founded in 1921 the Southern Pediatric Seminar in Saluda, North Carolina. This two-week post­graduate summer course was designed specifically for the general practitioner. Lectures were given by some of the South’s leading experts who paid their own expenses and donated their time to present the latest developments in pediatrics and obstetrics. The only expense to the student was a registration fee of $25.

Lesesne Smith was also a loyal alumnus of the Medical College. He was instrumental in gathering funds to build the Alumni Memorial house, and in starting postgraduate seminars.

Dr. Smith was active in professional organizations both statewide and nationally.  He was a devoted family man and was a “master of the art of living.” He knew how to play and when to stop, how to make friends and how to keep them.”  He died of heart disease on July 7, 1947.

Bio courtesy of The Waring Historical Library.

Saluda Train Tales is a free monthly event to educate the community of the importance of Saluda’s railroad history and the Saluda Grade. These events are at the Saluda Historic Depot, 32 W Main Street, Saluda, NC 28773 and start at 7pm.  Doors open at 6:30pm. The events are free and voluntary donations are appreciated.  Memberships and Donations to the Saluda Historic Depot in 2018 will enable us to receive incentive grant funds from the Polk County Community Foundation.

Details

Date:
August 17, 2018
Time:
6:30 pm - 8:00 pm
Event Category: