Beverly Lionberger Hodgins's exceptional biography shines a much-needed and long-overdue spotlight on one of America’s leading female physicians. Meticulously researched but told in an engaging and lively manner, Hodgins gracefully unspools the complicated and at times messy life of Dr. Mary Latham. Mercy and Madness, a fine achievement, belongs on every library and classroom bookshelf as well as in the hands of readers who admire courageous women who do the unexpected.
— Ann Weisgarber, author of The Glovemaker
Mercy and Madness: Dr. Mary Archard Latham’s Tragic Fall from Female Physician to Felon by Beverly Lionberger Hodgins depicts the life of a woman who, with an adventurous spirit and iron will, took total control of her life, but for whom that desire for control would eventually lead to her downfall. Scholarly and with meticulous research, yet immensely readable, Hodgins brings alive not only the central character of Dr. Mary Latham, but also all those associated with her, as well as the city of Spokane in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Quotes from Dr. Latham’s own correspondence further enhance our insights into her character and surroundings. They paint a picture of a woman totally immersed in the welfare of her community. From marriages through alcohol use and from suffragists to blue laws, Dr. Mary Latham’s philanthropic work makes it even more surprising that this “woman of the largest feelings for humanity,” as one friend called her, should meet such a sad end. A hidden scrap of history now deservedly recounted.
— Andrea Downing, award-winning author
Mercy and Madness is a deeply researched biography of the first female doctor in Spokane, Washington. Moving there from Ohio in the late 1880s, not only did she provide what might be said to be “usual” medical assistance, but she devoted herself to the care of unmarried pregnant young women and finding adoptive homes for their babies at a time when such women were vilified no matter the circumstances. Hodgins demonstrates how communities reacted to the problem of extramarital pregnancy. While important community-building accomplishments are usually attributed by historians to male businessmen and politicians, Hodgins illuminates Dr. Mary Latham’s contributions to her adopted city that most affected the families who settled in Spokane. She spearheaded many developments in addition to medical facilities, including the first public library and the movement for women’s suffrage and equal rights. Readers will follow Dr. Latham to the Klondike Gold Rush and her later years that were marked by what today would be called dementia, to prison after an arson conviction, and elder abuse. Hodgins includes large numbers of Latham’s writings, especially letters to local newspapers that allow readers to hear the doctor’s own voice over many years and make their own conclusions about her.
— Candace Wellman, author of Interwoven Lives, Indigenous Mothers of Salish Coast Communities
A well-researched biography and fascinating history of a woman doctor determined to reshape her future and the future of Spokane Falls. Dr. Mary A. Latham was respected for her work in medicine, horticulture, women’s rights, and orphan placement. Her practice was described as “a walking—or buggy-riding—emergency clinic.”
But after her son was killed, Dr. Latham fell from a lofty social position into ill health and became the subject of lawsuits over property and finances. From beloved to betrayed, the doctor’s reputation was blackened by fires determined to be arson, and was arrested, convicted and jailed. Beverly Lionberger Hodgins’s Mercy and Madness is an interesting, skillfully-written story.
— Heidi Thomas
Engagingly written and impeccably researched, Mercy and Madness brings to life a little-known slice of Washington State history. A must for readers of historical non-fiction, as well as those who love discovering a fascinating story about an utterly fascinating woman, far ahead of her time.
— Randall Platt, Three-time winner of the WILLA Literary Award for Young Adult Fiction
This impeccably researched, detailed, and compelling story of Spokane's first female physician is more than the tragic telling of one woman's fall into criminal madness. It’s an important chronicle of women’s history demonstrating how success and independence become a double-edged sword for women daring to defy convention.
Hodgins recounts the incredible accomplishments of a skilled and intrepid physician, with the courage and compassion to look beyond the social norms of her day and aid women and children cast aside by the community.
Despite her own life struggles, Dr. Mary Latham genuinely cared for needy women and children and worked tirelessly in practical ways to help them better their lives. Tragically, when she herself needed help, overcome by grief, medical issues, and mental illness, the upstanding citizens of the town abandoned her.
— Mary Cronk Farrell, author of Pure Grit: How American World War II Nurses Survived Battle and Prison Camp in the Pacific
Mercy and Madness: Dr. Mary Archard Latham’s Tragic Fall from Female Physician to Felon by Beverly Lionberger Hodgins, is public history at its best. Her writing is fresh, conversational, documented, and authentic. One feature is Dr. Mary Latham’s personal writings. The larger work puts the well-intentioned doctor’s opinions into context through historical tidbits from newspapers, coroner reports, Washington state archives, and more. Police reports about arson? Mortality records? The bibliography alone is twenty-two pages long. Hodgins has left no syringe empty in the remarkable documentation of one woman’s strife and successes in the late 1800s to early 1900s in the volatile American West. Bravo!
— Jane Kirkpatrick, New York Times bestselling-author, The Healing of Natalie Curtis
Mercy and Madness tells the story of Dr. Mary Archard Latham, one of the first women doctors in the West, and her fall from prominence in the Spokane, Washington, area to becoming an inmate in jail. This tale has been carefully and fully researched, and the use of Mary Latham’s articles and letters expand the reader’s knowledge of the time—1890s to 1920s. Mrs. Dr. Latham, as she was called in local newspapers, dedicated her life to taking care of women and children in need. She delivered babies, found homes for orphans, treated and cared for lost women in her own home, established clinics for women, and served as an example for other doctors and caregivers. Unfortunately, her side investments in real estate led to her downfall, but even in prison she helped other women inmates.
This is a fascinating story of what this one woman doctor has done for other women and children. Mary Latham was honored in Spokane for her remarkable legacy and as an Early Influencer.
— Julie Weston, author of Miners' Moon
A vibrant, thoroughly researched and insightful biography of Dr. Mary Latham’s compassionate life as a physician in early Spokane. Beverly Lionberger Hodgins enhances the sketchy knowledge of this remarkably complex woman, plus provides a portrait of how this gifted physician offered medical services for years to the marginalized citizens of Spokane, especially women, in an era of few female physicians. Having also lost an adult daughter, I wasn’t surprised to hear how traumatic the death of her beloved son proved to be for her mental health and eventual crisis that led to incarceration as a felon. Hodgins offers a rich and needed history in rediscovering the fuller tapestry of a significant woman’s life in early Spokane.
— Linda Lawrence Hunt, author of Bold Spirit: Helga Estby’s Forgotten Walk across Victorian America