Carl Rüedi (April 21 (or 23?), 1848 – June 17, 1901) was a Swiss
pulmonologist and at his lifetime one of the
best-known physicians in
Graubünden.
Rüedi rose to fame around the world after having treated the
Scottish author
Robert Louis
Stevenson in the winters of 1880-81 and 1881-82. Stevenson
praised Rüedi in the dedication of his poetry collection
Underwoods (1887) as
"the good genius of the English
in his frosty mountains".
Life
Descent and childhood (1848-66)
Carl Rüedi was the youngest of eight children of the Graubünden
district doctor and pioneer of
climatotherapy Lucius Rüedi and his wife Rahel (née
Conrad).
Yet in early childhood Carl Rüedi excelled himself by physical
fitness, liveliness and intelligence.
At the tender age of
four Carl hiked with his father in midsummer from Alvaneu
(the
family’s residence) to Davos (Carl’s birthplace) 23 kilometers
(14.3 miles) away. When Carl was nine of age, he and two of his
brothers who attended the cantonal school at Chur
, hiked 55
kilometers (34.2 miles) from Chur to Davos on one day.
Years of study and first sojourn in the USA (1866-74)
In 1866
Carl Rüedi enrolled at the University of Tübingen
to study Protestant
theology. In the summer of 1867
Rüedi continued his study at the University of
Zürich
.
Carl’s
elder brother Wilhelm had been living as a physician in the
United
States
for 12 years. In 1867 Wilhelm came
for a visit to his home village Zizers
(Graubünden)
and suggested his brothers Carl and Paul to follow him to
America. Both agreed, and on December 17, 1867 they
set out for Philadelphia
(Pennsylvania
). Paul, a trained physician, opened a
doctor’s office there and did not visit his homeland before 1882.
(Paul
(born November 19, 1844) had studied medicine at the University of
Würzburg
(winter of 1863-64) , the University of
Zürich
(summer of 1864) , the University of
Munich
(summer of 1865 – winter of 1865-66) and the
University of
Tübingen
(summer of 1866) .) Impressed by his two brothers
Carl also got interested in medicine.
After his
father’s death (1870) Carl returned to Zizers and took up a study
of medicine at the University of Bern
in April 1870. In the summer of 1871
he changed to the University of Würzburg
.
In the
winter of 1871-72 and the summer of 1872 Carl Rüedi continued his
study of medicine at the University of Munich
. In the winter of 1872-73 he returned to the
University
of Bern
and prepared himself for the final exams. In
the spring of 1874 he received an M.D.
(Doctor of Medicine) and opened a doctor’s
office in the village of Seewis im Prättigau
(Graubünden).
Early working years: Davos (1874-91)
On
December 24, 1874 Carl Rüedi received a call as a district doctor
at Davos, Europe’s leading winter health
resort (beside St.
Moritz
) in those days. Thus Rüedi held the same
post as his father previously. Rüedi doctor’s office was in the
Rhätia hotel.
At Davos Rüedi erected a private residence called
Villa
Richmond.
It was
named after the county in the state of New York
where he had spent some time between
1867-70.
On February 26, 1875 Carl Rüedi, together with two other
representatives of the
Rhätia hotel, was elected into the
managing committee of the newly founded health resort club. On July
30 or 31, 1875 he was additionally elected its
treasurer. In 1876 Rüedi was admissioned to the
Graubünden Society of Physicians (
Bündner Ärzteverein)
[852375] seated in Chur.
By the growing number of
tuberculosis
patients coming to Davos Carl Rüedi was well off. Within few years
Rüedi gained an excellent reputation among his clientele. By the
end of 1878 Rüedi resigned his post of a district doctor and
concentrated on his activities as a private doctor.
Rüedi’s therapeutical successes were due to a combination of
medical competence and the
high-Alpine climate of Davos (altitude 1.560 m / 5,118 ft) with
its cool, clean and dry air. Rüedi impressed by exact diagnoses, an
extraordinary delicate
ear when ausculating the
respiratory tract and a profound
knowledge of all kinds and stages of lung troubles.
The major portion of Rüedi’s clientele came from the Anglo-American
countries. Thanks to his excellent command of
English Rüedi gained a factual
monopoly of this clientele within few years.
Carl
Rüedi’s popularity among the English-speaking patients was
supported by his Scottish
wife (née Mackenzie). On June 25, 1879 the
couple had a son who was christened John (
sic!)
.
Intermediate working years: Denver (1891-96)
Rüedi was so much in demand that he came to the limit of his
capacity.
To let his competence take effect under less
exhaustive conditions he emigrated to the USA by the end of April
1891 and opened a doctor’s office at Denver
(Colorado
). Rüedi had chosen the town at the foot of
the
Rocky Mountains for her
approximately same altitude (1,609 m / 5,279 ft) as Davos. There
could be no talk, however, of similar climatic conditions, Rüedi
confessed later .
In those
years American pulmunologists sent well-off clients for a high-altitude therapy to sanatoriums in the Swiss Alps
(Davos, St. Moritz), the Giant Mountains
(Görbersdorf
) or the Adirondack
Mountains (Saranac Lake, New
York). In the Rocky Mountains, however, there was hardly any
medical
infrastructure for
tuberculosis patients.
Apart from a sanatorium in the hamlet of Hygiene
(Boulder County, Colorado
) (altitude 1,553 m / 5,095 ft) which Rüedi visited
in October 1891 there only existed primitive camps of covered
wagons and tents or isolated pensions and hotels. .
Yet in the year of his arrival in America Carl Rüedi was elected a
fellow of the
American Clinical and Climatological Association
(ACCA) . This professional organization had been founded by
physicians and scientists in 1884 to improve the medical training,
research and practice in the USA. In its early years the ACCA
mainly aimed at treating tuberculosis patients by sojourns in a
suitable climate. As a pioneer of the practical climatotherapy
Rüedi was one of the main authorities for the concern of the ACCA.
In 1895 Carl Rüedi held two lectures before the ACCA.
In his first lecture (
A Comparison of the Winter Healthresorts
in the Alps with some Places in the Rocky Mountains of
Colorado ) Rüedi argued that,
Rüedi presented the vision of a climatic health resort cluster in
the Rocky Mountains.
Each resort would be situated at a different
altitude, thus allowing pulmonologists to choose where to send
their clients, depending on the stage of illness and physical
constitution: From Denver and surroundings to either Colorado
Springs
at 6,000 ft (1,829 m), Estes Park
at 7,000 ft (2.134 m) or a location at 8,000 ft
(2.439 m) still to be identified by Rüedi. "This would
be a health-resort (sic!) not known
before".
In his second lecture (
A Peep into the Future, with Respect of
pathological-anatomical Researches) Rüedi criticized the
one-sided sympathy of his medical colleagues for the
cytopathology . Rüedi pleaded for exploring
not only the
cells and
tissues but also the liquid components of
the human body outside the cells, in particular the
blood serum, the
lymph and
the
tissue fluid. Rüedi was convinced
that
analysing the blood serum would
provide physicians a valuable means to forecast the „
degenerations” in the cells of the respective
person which are to be expected in the near future .
Rüedi’s expectations regarding the New World, however, did not
materialize. (Perhaps the medical infrastructure developed too
slowly in his eyes.) For that reason Rüedi returned to Switzerland
after only five years (1896).
Last working years: Arosa (1896-1901)
In his absence, however, the working conditions for physicians at
Davos had changed dramatically. By the introduction of a limited
number of
licenses to local physicians the
exercise of the medical profession had become so
regulated that even a capacity like Rüedi had no
chance of opening a doctor’s office there.
Instead of Davos Rüedi settled in the small health resort of Arosa
(altitude 1,775 m / 5,823 ft), 13 kilometres (8 miles) west of
Davos. In the winter of 1896-97 Rüedi started to practice as a
private doctor at the
Grand Hotel Arosa.
Regarding its development, however, the village of Arosa lay
decades behind Davos. The high-altitude therapy of tuberculosis had
not been introduced there before 1880 when the first hotel
(
Seehof) was opened. And it was not before 1888 when the
first sanatorium had opened. (At this time Arosa had not more than
88 residents.)
The number of Rüedi’s clients remained disappointingly low. Rüedi
seriously worried about his financial income and started to commit
himself in raising the attractiveness of Arosa as a health resort.
On October 4, 1896 Rüedi was unanimously elected a member of the
local health resort club. He regularly participated in the meetings
and made numerous proposals, e.g. the erection of an artificial
toboggan run. On June 22, 1897 Rüedi
suggested to introduce a
street
lighting. In November 1900 Rüedi and four of his medical
colleagues suggested to establish a scientific club. Every two
weeks three
academics should discuss a
subject of general interest (except
religion and
politics) in
front of a public audience.
In his sparetime Rüedi was active in organizing and timekeeping the
wintertime sledge races which were first and foremost arranged for
the entertainment of
tourists.
Arosa’s most serious impediment in development, however, was the
lack of convenient transportation facilities to and from the
village. In those years it took visitors several hours by
stagecoach to travel the 22 kilometres (13.7
miles) from Chur. Carl Rüedi’s greatest concern, therefore, was the
improvement of the traffic connections from the Graubünden capital
to Arosa.
On September 14, 1897 Rüedi and some other residents of Arosa
established a
commission with the
objective of broadening the narrow road from Chur to Arosa.
In 1900
(or shortly before) Carl Rüedi and the Graubünden Landammann (governor) Hans Brunold of Peist
(1856-1937)
submitted petitions to the Great Council (the parliament of
Graubünden) and the Federal Assembly of
Switzerland for the erection of an electric railway between Chur and Arosa.
Carl Rüedi, however, was not granted to witness the arrival of the
first train at Arosa (December 1914). On June 17, 1901 Rüedi died
unexpectedly at Arosa at the early age of 53.
Notes
- Carl was the spelling used by Rüedi himself and his
contemporaries. The spelling Karl became frequent from
about 1900. In the Anglo-American literature Rüedi is mostly
written Carl Ruedi or Karl Ruedi.
- Student directory of the Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen:
entry #37582 [1]
- Student directory of the University of Zürich: entry #3261
[2]. As the place of his origin the village of
Filisur (Graubünden) is given there.
- Personalbestand der königlich bayerischen
Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg im Wintersemester 1863/64,
amtlich herausgegeben, Würzburg 1864, p. 35
- Student directory of the University of Zürich: entry #2745
[3]
- Amtliches Verzeichnis des Personals der Lehrer, Beamte and
Studirenden an der königlich bayerischen
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität zu München. Sommer-Semester 1865,
p. 45
- Amtliches Verzeichnis des Personals der Lehrer, Beamte and
Studirenden an der königlich bayerischen
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität zu München. Wintersemester 1865/66,
p. 45
- Student directory of the Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen:
entry #37583 [4]
- Student directory of the University of Bern: entry #2426 (April
25, 1870), exmatrikulation on April 21, 1871 [5]
- Personalbestand der königlich bayerischen
Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg im Sommersemester 1871;
amtlich herausgegeben, Würzburg 1871, p. 36
- Amtliches Verzeichnis des Personals der Lehrer, Beamte and
Studirenden an der königlich bayerischen
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität zu München. Winter-Semester 1871/72,
p. 46
- Amtliches Verzeichnis des Personals der Lehrer, Beamte and
Studirenden an der königlich bayerischen
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität zu München. Sommer-Semester 1872,
p. 46
- Student directory of the University of Bern: entry #2742
(October 28, 1872) [6]
- Only in 1875 virtually no English-speaking visitor had been to
Davos.
- As a grown-up John studied medicine himself; cf. student
directory of the University of Zürich: entry #13164 [7].
- A. McGehee Harvey: The American Clinical and Climatological
Association: 1884 – 1984, p. 49
- The elevation data is not quite exact. Rüedi “rounded” them for
rhetorical reasons.
- In 1858 Rudolf Virchow had published his epochal opus
„Cellularpathologie“ [8] in which he stated that illnesses are caused by
defects of the somatic cells and their functions.
- Quote: "(...) to decide what alterations in the cells have
to be expected, or to give us an explanation why the different
degenerations in the cells take place."
- Rüedi’s home municipality of Davos had been profiting from such
a connection for ten years already.
References
- Davoser Blätter. Curzeitung and Fremdenliste, 20nd annual vol.,
no. 8, February 21, 1891, p. 1; and 20nd annual vol., no. 18, May
9, 1891, p 1.
- Visitors list of Arosa, no. 6, November 18, 1900, p 1.
- Minutes of the health resort club [von Arosa], June 23, 1901
(Manuskript); no page given.
- No author given: Allerlei von der Chur-Arosa-Bahn and ihrer
Vorgeschichte; in: Abendzeitung (Arosa), December 4, 1964; no page
given.
- Jules Ferdmann: Der Aufstieg von Davos; Verlag Genossenschaft
Davoser Revue, 2nd edition, 1990 (1st edition, 1935).
- No author given: Dr. C. Ruedi – Arzt in Arosa (handwritten
notes from the period October 4, 1896 – September 14, 1897); in the
possession of the museum of local history and culture Schanfigg,
Arosa.