Dr. James Marion Sims

by Louise Pettus

On April 25, 1950, a historical marker was dedicated near Heath Springs in Lancaster County. The marker reads:

BIRTHPLACE OF JAMES MARION SIMS, M.D.
JAMES MARION SIMS, WORLD FAMED PHYSICIAN
FATHER OF MODERN GYNECOLOGY
A BLESSING AND A BENEFACTOR TO WOMEN
WAS BORN IN THE FARM HOUSE OF HIS PARENTS
NEAR THIS SITE JANUARY 25, 1813
DOCTOR TO EMPRESS AND SLAVE ALIKE
FOUNDER OF WOMAN'S HOSPITAL
OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
KNIGHT OF THE LEGION OF HONOR OF FRANCE
HONORED BY EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN GOVERNMENTS
HE DIED IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK
NOVEMBER 13, 1883
ERECTED BY LANCASTER COUNTY, 1949
SPONSORED BY WAXHAWS CHAPTER, D.A.R.

Besides the D.A.R. sponsors, there was a sizable crowd who wished to pay their respects to this remarkable man. Congressman James P. Richards welcomed the visitors, which included representatives of the American Medical Association, the Medical College of South Carolina, the University of South Carolina, Col. Elliott W. Springs, who was chairman of Lancaster's Marion Sims Memorial Hospital board, Dr. A.S. Salley, state archivist and Mrs. Mary Simms Oliphant, historian.

Also present were four descendants of Sims--Marion Sims Wyeth, Sr., architect of Palm Springs, Florida; Marion Sims Wyeth, Jr., the Macmillan Company, New York; Dr. Alice Gregory, New York City physician, and Miss Jane Marion McLean of New York City.

Dr. Roderick McDonald of Rock Hill, president of the South Carolina Medical Association, introduced the speaker, Dr. Seale Harris, past president of the Southern Medical Association, who had written a biography of Sims, "Woman's Surgeon." Dr. Sims, himself, had written an autobiography that he titled "The Story of My Life" which is a highly interesting account, and is fascinating to local history buffs for its detail of his youth in Lancaster County.

Marion Sims' father was Jack Sims, an early county sheriff. Jack Sims, according to his son, felt that he was lacking in education, and was determined that Marion be well-educated. Accordingly, Jack Sims and friends built a school in Lancaster they called Franklin Academy. From there, Sims went to South Carolina Medical College.

Dr. Sims came back to Lancasterville to practice. His first two patients died. In despair, Marion Sims left for Montgomery, Alabama. There he created surgical techniques and invented 71 instruments to aid women with childbirth problems. In 1853, he moved to New York and established the Woman's Hospital of the State of New York, and later established the Cancer Hospital, now known as Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.

In 1863, Sims moved to France to be surgeon to Empress Eugenie. In France he became a wealthy man. When he returned to New York in 1866 his thoughts were of his native Lancaster County, now in dire poverty following the trauma of the Civil War. Through his Lancaster friend and former student, John F.G. Mittag, Sims generously sent food and money to the needy. He donated 60 acres of land to the county and enough money to equip a large building known as "The J. Marion Sims Asylum for the Poor."

Sims wrote extensively in medical journals and was an active member of many medical societies in America and in Europe. Dr. Sims taught other doctors and was the first doctor in the United States to professionally train surgical nurses. He liked to recruit doctors and nurses from this area. Many of these returned to serve Lancaster, Chester and York counties. One of the most famed students was Dr. Gill Wylie of Chester, who also made his mark in the development of hydroelectric power and for whom Lake Wylie is named.

Directly and indirectly, the influence of Dr. J. Marion Sims on the health of this area is still being felt.