Eleanor Soltau
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Eleanor Soltau (1877–1962) was an English doctor who led the first unit of the
Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service The Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Services (SWH) was founded in 1914. It was led by Dr. Elsie Inglis and provided nurses, doctors, ambulance drivers, cooks and orderlies. By the end of World War I, 14 medical units had been outfitted an ...
in Serbia.


Early life

Soltau was born in
Romford Romford is a large town in east London and the administrative centre of the London Borough of Havering. It is located northeast of Charing Cross and is one of the major metropolitan centres identified in the London Plan. Historically, Romfo ...
, Essex, in late 1877. Her parents were George Soltau (d. c.1896), a
nonconformist Nonconformity or nonconformism may refer to: Culture and society * Insubordination, the act of willfully disobeying an order of one's superior *Dissent, a sentiment or philosophy of non-agreement or opposition to a prevailing idea or entity ** ...
minister of Barnstaple, and his wife, Grace Elizabeth Soltau,
suffragist Suffrage, political franchise, or simply franchise, is the right to vote in public, political elections and referendums (although the term is sometimes used for any right to vote). In some languages, and occasionally in English, the right to v ...
and first president of the Tasmanian Woman's Christian Temperance Union, daughter of A. J. Tapson MB, London. There were nine children in all, born between 1876 and 1890. In the 1880s the family moved to Launceston, Tasmania, where Eleanor's father took charge of a mission church and in 1887 her mother set up the pioneering Hope Cottage, a refuge and lying-in home for single mothers. Soltau attended Launceston Ladies' College and was successful in the matriculation examination for Melbourne University in 1893.


Medical career

Soltau qualified as a doctor at the
London School of Medicine for Women The London School of Medicine for Women (LSMW) established in 1874 was the first medical school in Britain to train women as doctors. The patrons, vice-presidents, and members of the committee that supported and helped found the London School of Me ...
. Then at Ilford, she passed her final examination in February 1902, before working in a hospital in India. Soltau is known for her leadership of a hospital unit in Serbia during the
First World War World War I (28 July 1914 11 November 1918), often abbreviated as WWI, was one of the deadliest global conflicts in history. Belligerents included much of Europe, the Russian Empire, the United States, and the Ottoman Empire, with fightin ...
, but the bulk of her career was spent in Stoke-by-Nayland in Suffolk, where for 25 years she worked alongside Jane Walker at the special
tuberculosis Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease usually caused by '' Mycobacterium tuberculosis'' (MTB) bacteria. Tuberculosis generally affects the lungs, but it can also affect other parts of the body. Most infections show no symptoms, i ...
hospital there founded by Walker. Walker was the medical superintendent and Soltau, the assistant medical superintendent. Soltau succeeded Walker on the latter's death in 1938. At Nayland there were three separate sanatoriums in all: the East Anglian Sanatorium (for private patients only, opened 1901), the Maltings Farm Sanatorium (opened 1904, for poor patients; around the time of the First World War and after it the male patients were mostly ex-servicemen) and the East Anglian Children's Sanatorium (established between 1912 and 1916, for children from 3 to 16 years of age). Soltau recalled that many newly qualified medical women gained their first experience at the sanatoriums. Soltau also worked at the Royal Free Hospital in London at some point before the First World War. After the war, her mother lived with her in her mother's later years.


Artificial pneumothorax

Walker and Soltau published on treatment by artificial
pneumothorax A pneumothorax is an abnormal collection of air in the pleural space between the lung and the chest wall. Symptoms typically include sudden onset of sharp, one-sided chest pain and shortness of breath. In a minority of cases, a one-way valve i ...
, a form of lung collapse therapy, in the ''BMJ'' in 1913. The following February, at a meeting of the Association of Registered Medical Women, Soltau showed how two patients with advanced phthisis (tuberculosis), a woman and a man, had been treated effectively by artificial pneumothorax at Maltings Farm Sanatorium. An advert for the three Nayland sanatoriums in the new '' Postgraduate Medical Journal'' in 1926 offered "treatment of Pulmonary And Other Forms Of Tuberculosis. Special Treatment by Artificial Pneumothorax (X-Ray Controlled). Electric Lighting throughout. Training given in Poultry Farming, Gardening and various Handicrafts. Medical Supt., Dr. Jane Walker. Assistant Medical Supt., Dr. Eleanor Soltau, and other Medical Officers." Soltau was in charge of young tuberculous cases at the sanatorium and commented on treatment by artificial pneumothorax in children in her care in the '' British Journal of Tuberculosis''. In 1934 she reported in the ''BMJ'' on 46 cases of children who had pulmonary tuberculosis treated by artificial pneumothorax at Nayland, dating back to 1912.


First World War service

Soltau was among those who applied to help the war effort under the auspices of the Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service, whose first unit left for France in November 1914. Soltau led the second unit, which left for Serbia in the following January. When the Austrians retreated from Serbia in late 1914 they had left behind "filthy hospitals crowded with wounded, Austrian and Serb alike. The whole land has been spoken of as one vast hospital." The resulting outbreak of
typhus Typhus, also known as typhus fever, is a group of infectious diseases that include epidemic typhus, scrub typhus, and murine typhus. Common symptoms include fever, headache, and a rash. Typically these begin one to two weeks after exposure. ...
"flowed over Serbia like a flood ... more than a quarter of the Serbian doctors died, and two-thirds of the remainder had the disease." This was the context in which Soltau's unit began work in Kragujevac on 5 January 1915. It took over a school "where the sick and wounded were lying on mattresses on the floors, and later on took over five inns in the town where slightly wounded men were dealt with". Soltau soon had command of three hospitals. '' Common Cause'', organ of the
National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies The National Union of Women Suffrage Societies (NUWSS), also known as the ''suffragists'' (not to be confused with the suffragettes) was an organisation founded in 1897 of women's suffrage societies around the United Kingdom. In 1919 it was ren ...
, wrote in May 1916: "To Dr. Soltau's everlasting credit, she took over, with her small staff and, for such an increase of work, her inadequate equipment, No. 6 Reserve Hospital for typhus cases and No. 7 Reserve Hospital for ordinary medical cases, in addition to her surgical hospital, which was full." On 23 January 1915 Soltau wired the Hospitals committee in Edinburgh: "Dire necessity for fever nurses. Can you send me ten or more overland? ... Equipment, mattresses, covers, blankets, linen, milk, typhol, carbolic, tow, castor-oil." She also gave details of her plans to open a special typhus hospital in Kragujevac. As well as victims of disease the unit had to deal with injured men from
Valjevo Valjevo (Serbian Cyrillic: Ваљево, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Kolubara District in western Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the administrative area of Valjevo had 90,312 inhabitants, 59,073 of whom were urban dwell ...
who arrived "in a row of bullock-carts" one morning. "Every one was suffering from gangrenous wounds. The work was overwhelming." Soltau reported: "The newly arrived doctors and nurses, inured to all manner of human suffering and more or less prepared for working under bad conditions, were struck dumb by the horror of it all." Reinforcements and equipment arrived, and for "three long months those women worked there, facing the hard work and the long strain with indomitable spirit. There were three deaths among the Unit, young lives given in a great cause, and nine cases of illness, and still the effort never relaxed. ... It is a strange, dark, gruesome time to look back on; but one marked by many brave deeds and much unrecorded heroism." The Scottish nurse
Louisa Jordan Louisa Jordan (24 July 1878 – 6 March 1915) was a Scottish nurse who died in service during the First World War. Early life and nursing career Louisa Jordan was born at 279 Gairbraid Street (now Maryhill Road) in the Maryhill area of Glasg ...
was one of those who died, in March 1915. Soltau herself fell ill with diphtheria in April and was invalided home. Her replacement was Dr Elsie Inglis. On 1 July 1915 Soltau gave a talk in Edinburgh hosted by the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies entitled "The Work of the Scottish Women's Hospitals in Serbia." About 50 women attended, including Miss A. Hunter (wearing the Serbian Red Cross Order and the Working Hospitals Order), Lucy Smith and Florence Macleod, who had all looked after the wounded in the Scottish Hospital in Serbia. Soltau wore the 3rd Class
Order of St Sava The Royal Order of St. Sava is an Order of merit, first awarded by the Kingdom of Serbia in 1883 and later by the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, and the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. It was awarded to nationals and foreigners for meritorious ach ...
and the Serbian Red Cross Order. In February 1918
King George V George V (George Frederick Ernest Albert; 3 June 1865 – 20 January 1936) was King of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions, and Emperor of India, from 6 May 1910 until his death in 1936. Born during the reign of his grandmother Qu ...
granted Soltau "unrestricted permission" to wear the St Sava insignia, which had been "conferred upon her by the King of Serbia in recognition of her services to the Serbian sick and wounded" during the typhus epidemic. On 17 November 1917 Soltau was appointed medical controller in the QMAAC.


Later life

Soltau moved to London and lived at de Vere Gardens, Kensington. She died on 30 December 1962 at Arranmore,
Bushey Bushey is a town in the Hertsmere borough of Hertfordshire in the East of England. It has a population of over 25,000 inhabitants. Bushey Heath is a large neighbourhood south east of Bushey on the boundary with the London Borough of Harrow ...
, Hertfordshire. She is reported to have been buried next to Jane Walker in the graveyard at Wissington church.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Soltau, Eleanor 1962 deaths 20th-century women physicians British women in World War I Kragujevac Military hospitals in Serbia 1877 births 20th-century English medical doctors Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service volunteers