I never knew my Uncle Johnny. He died when he was 7 years old – many years before I was born. He was the second of 8 children born to my paternal grandparents. They were immigrants from Croatia and Austria. Croatia was of several countries that eventually combined to form Yugoslavia and then became Croatia again when Yugoslavia broke up. As I tried to follow my grandparent’s timeline in the 1920, 1930, and 1940 census my grandmother’s country of origin was listed as Croatia-> Yugoslavia-> Yugoslavia. I am trying to piece that all together from the usual genealogy sites. Nobody in my family ever talked about Johnny. I did not know he existed until 4 months ago. I was trying to find information about my paternal grandfather and landed on the census that showed he had 3 children – 2 aunts familiar to me and Johnny.
We always knew that my father had a brother who died in
childhood. We did not know how old he was when he died, but we knew it was a
gruesome death. I was told that “he was
held over a fire by two kids and burned to death.” I was also told that child’s name was George
and my father and subsequently I was named after him. I also heard a version of the story that he
was named Nick after my grandfather. I
had an uncle who had Nick as a middle name.
Once I found out that Johnny existed, I sent an email to the
Wisconsin Historical Society to track down what happened to him and the
date he died. In Wisconsin you cannot
get a death certificate unless you know the exact date of death. I was sent
newspaper clippings from several Wisconsin newspapers. The basic story in those
papers was that Johnny went down to a local coal dock to see an airplane with
several other boys. There was a bonfire
next to the plane. He sustained severe
burns, and died 2 days later in a hospital.
In the hospital he told his father that he was pushed into the fire. Subsequently there was another story that he
was held over the fire. The Police Chief
investigated what happened. Some of the
boys were questioned. Several of them were named in the newspaper. After
the article about his death, there are no further articles about the outcome of
that investigation or whether the death was ruled accidental or a crime.
As a physician from an acute care hospital just the thought
of what happened to Johnny evokes anxiety, anger, and hopelessness. There was no burn care in 1925. I did psychiatric consults on the burn unit
at our modern trauma center for many years.
Burn care is emotionally demanding for both the patients and their
physicians. Early on, one of the burn surgeons told me that he had informed
consent discussions with severely burned patients and gave them all the option
to choose no care except pain relief. It is difficult to imagine what the care
must have been like in 1925 for my 7-year-old uncle during his last days. There
were several statements about my grandfather seeking justice – but I am not
sure whether that happened or not.
There is a story that the boys involved did not do well as
adults and that one of them may have died by suicide. At this point I cannot
corroborate the outcome of the police investigation. The local police department does not have
records that old. I have requested the extended fact of death
certificate to see if a specific cause of the severe burn injury is listed. Local officials were initially unable to
locate that death certificate until I discovered that the names of decedents
were frequently misspelled – even official records (3,4). I located a gravestone in the local cemetery
marked John Dowson. I sent that
to the Register of Deeds and she was able to locate the death certificate under
the name John Dosson. Given the age, date of death, and size of the town
– it could not be anyone else. It is
also the first time I saw his date of birth.
Given the historical limitations what were the potential
impacts on the family? Trauma is an
overworked word these days in psychiatry and psychology. Recent advocates of explaining nearly all
psychopathology in terms of trauma and providing trauma informed care
seem to have ignored the history of the field. To cite a few examples – sexual trauma in
children has been described back into the 19th century by
psychiatrists (1). The trauma and
biological effects of being raised in orphanages (psychosocial dwarfism) was
described by psychiatrists (2). Combat
related trauma and PTSD was so well described that several of my mentors were
placed in accelerated psychiatric residency programs to make sure the US
Military had enough psychiatrists to treat the psychiatric complications of
World War 2. It is worth noting that
before shell shock or the stress of combat was not seen as an etiology. Soldiers exhibiting those symptoms were seen
as morally deficient. In other words – the soldier was seen as flawed and combat
exposure was incidental. In the early days of correcting that diagnosis the
most frequent diagnosis in the German army was psychopathic personality
suggesting an intrinsic susceptibility to overrespond to life threatening
stressors.
Over the span of my career I taught and practiced detailed
phenomenological assessments that included every possible context that
psychiatric disorders or symptoms occur in.
It was quite a shock when I started hearing about trauma informed
care and started to see the iatrogenic
problems associated with it. In the population I was treating at the time
there were a significant number of immigrants from Africa, Russia, and
Asia. I routinely worked with 15
different language interpreters. Many of
the immigrants had been exposed to war and torture. The prevalence of torture victims was so high
that there is a Center for Victims of Torture in Minnesota that
was established in 1980.
Despite those clear correlations the relationship between
stressors or trauma and psychopathology is complex. One of the primary problems is
oversimplification. It is well known that people subjected to the similar
catastrophic stressors do
not respond in the same way (5,6) This
is due to several biological, environmental, and psychological factors that are
typically called resilience. More
resilience translated to less maladaptive stress response. In some cases, the stress response is very
transient to nonexistent. In others it follows
a predictable course and in some it does not resolve without treatment. The emphasis on identifiable stress response syndromes
– Acute Stress Disorder and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder does not capture all
the effects of these events. It is
clearly possible to have your life impacted by this kind of an event and not
develop these full syndromes.
There have been efforts to more clearly correlate adverse life experiences with both physical and mental health. The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) inventory was developed by the CDC and used to look at childhood adverse experience with subsequent problems. The checklist is listed below and it was designed to be given only to adults over the age of 18. Inspecting those questions and the scoring it is apparent the focus is on physical, sexual, emotional, and verbal abuse and neglect. There are four items on the lack of availability of a parent due to substance use, mental illness, separation or divorce, and/or incarceration. The adverse experiences are all originating in a parent, caregiver, or person living in the same household. Nothing about bad accidents originating outside the family or the death of a parent or sibling.
In the case of my Uncle Johnny – what was the impact of his
death on the family? Why was his name
never used in discussions with his siblings?
Did it matter if the cause of death was never adequately resolved? Did it lead to effects that are not typically
considered as adverse childhood experiences?
None of his siblings knew his name.
The names passed on to the next generation were not accurate. Why were his death and the associated
circumstances never talked about in the family?
Every family has characteristics that family members think
about. I can think of a few for
mine. We lived an isolated
existence. A typical family outing was a
drive in the countryside. We did not
socialize with anyone. Once or twice a
year my father’s brother or brother-in-law would stop by. Once or twice a year – we would stop by to
see one of my father’s coworkers or a guy he used to play baseball with. I did not know about the baseball connection
until I found a picture of his team online – 40 years after he died.
We would visit my maternal grandparents often. It was one of the few places my father would
smile. He was typically very serious and
showed emotions only during times of stress or if he was listening to opera or
a comedian on TV. I once asked him if I
could play Little League baseball and he said: “As long as you know you are
playing it for you and not for me.” I
got a similar reaction when I tried to give him a fishing rod for Father’s Day:
“You just want me to take you fishing. I
don’t fish because when I was a kid we had to fish every day for food.” His family home was right next to the coal
dock where I usually went fishing. The
only consistent story we heard about his childhood was what it was like to grow
up during the Great Depression. One
of the last events my father attended was a banquet for my high school football
team. It was an undefeated season and I
was one of four sophomores. He was at
the event and seemed to enjoy himself – but never said a word about it to me.
If things got a little out of control – my father got
angry. I remember when one of us fell
down a staircase. He was clearly upset
but it was mostly anger. At times it
came across like he was blaming the person who had the accident. I found a box of rifle cartridges in the old
horse barn modified to be our garage. I
put them in the trash burning pile that he attended next to our house every
other night. I still remember him
dancing around when those cartridges went off. He showed plenty of restraint when
I admitted doing it and that was the end of it.
I went out the next day and found the exploded cartridges in the ashes –
the brass peeled back in a flower petal design.
There were many more situations that occurred between my
father and I that I would consider unusual in retrospect. There were only 5 children in our family and
I cannot imagine what it would be like with three more. We lived “paycheck to
paycheck” but never ran out of food.
There was not a lot of joy in the household. I worried about him and
still have the mental image of him walking home in knee deep snow from work. I worried because he told me that deep snow
could get pulled into the air intake of his diesel locomotive and kill the
engines. In that blizzard he was leaning
into the wind, covered in snow, wearing a flimsy fishing hat, and no gloves. I was the only one up waiting for him at
11PM. He walked in smelling like diesel
oil and Lucky Strikes and shook off the snow.
He was freezing. I was happy to
see him.
As I think about my Uncle Johnny and my family of origin
there are more questions than answers.
Would things have been different for all of us if he had not been
killed? Would my father have been a happier guy? Would we have been less isolated? Would the paternal side of the family have
been less fragmented? Can a catastrophic
event like that have intergenerational effects?
There are only suggestions described by statistics at this point. Studies like the impact of violence on mothers
in families and the unique stressors that immigrants experience.
In an ideal world - the people closest to the incident have
the greatest ability to process it and frame it for future generations. They may not have the ability to do that but
make no mistake about it – that is a very difficult task.
George Dawson, MD, DFAPA
1: Esquirol JE. Suicide in Dictionnaire des
Sciences Medicales. A Group of
Physicians and Surgeons (eds). 1821:
219-220
French psychiatrist Jean-Étienne Dominique is credited with
suggesting that suicide was associated with mental disorders and was not the
result of moral weakness and therefore not a sin or a crime. In this initial report he described and
attempted sexual assault by the father on a 16-year-old daughter resulting in
several suicide attempts. I could not
access the original Dictionnaire des Sciences Medicales - but found this
interpretation in Peter Gay’s Freud – A Life for Our Time – page 95
footnote.
2: Spitz RA. The role
of ecological factors in emotional development in infancy. Child Development.
1949 Sep 1:145-55.
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PMC5692167.
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