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Treves and Merrick
* Sir Frederick Treves, 1st Bt ( doctor, treated King Edward VII and Joseph Merrick, " The Elephant Man ")
The " Elephant Man ", Joseph Carey Merrick ( 1862 – 1890 ) became well known in Whitechapel — he was exhibited in a shop on the Whitechapel Road before being helped by Dr Frederick Treves ( 1853 – 1923 ) at the Royal London Hospital, opposite the actual shop.
Norman's shop, directly across the street from the London Hospital, was visited by a surgeon named Frederick Treves, who invited Merrick to be examined and photographed.
Treves came and took Merrick back to the London Hospital.
The official cause of death was asphyxia, although Treves, who dissected the body, said that Merrick had died of a dislocated neck.
Frederick Treves first met Merrick that November at a private viewing, before Norman opened the shop for the day.
Treves later recalled in his 1923 Reminiscences that Merrick was " the most disgusting specimen of humanity that I had ever seen ... at no time had I met with such a degraded or perverted version of a human being as this lone figure displayed.
To enable him to travel the short distance without drawing undue attention, Merrick wore a costume consisting of a huge black cloak and a brown cap with a hood that covered his face, and rode in a cab hired by Treves.
At the hospital, Treves examined Merrick, observing that he was " shy, confused, not a little frightened, and evidently much cowed.
Apart from his deformities and the lameness in his hip, Treves concluded that Merrick appeared to be in good general health.
Norman later recalled that Merrick went to the hospital for examination " two or three " times and during one of their meetings, Treves gave Merrick his calling card.
On one of the visits, Treves had photographs taken and he provided Merrick with a set of copies which were later added to his autobiographical pamphlet.
On 2 December, Treves presented Merrick at a meeting of the Pathological Society of London in Bloomsbury.
Recognising Merrick, Treves took him in a hansom cab to the London Hospital.
With Merrick admitted into the hospital, Treves now had time to conduct a more thorough examination.
Treves also suspected that Merrick now suffered from a heart condition and that he had only a few years left to live.
Francis Carr Gomm, the chairman of the hospital committee, had supported Treves in his decision to admit Merrick, but by November, long-term plans needed to be made.
The rooms were adapted and furnished to suit Merrick, with a specially constructed bed and — at Treves ' instruction — no mirrors.
Treves and Merrick built a friendly relationship, although Merrick never completely confided in him.
He told Treves that he was an only child, and Treves had the impression that Merrick's mother, whose picture Merrick always carried with him, had abandoned him as a baby.
It did not take Treves long to realise that, contrary to his initial impressions, Merrick was not intellectually impaired.
Treves observed that Merrick was very sensitive and showed his emotions easily.

Treves and would
Treves was almost destroyed by the barbarians ; yet the first petition of its few surviving nobles was that the emperor would re-establish the circus games as a remedy for the ruined city ( vi.

Treves and like
In 1905 Sir Frederick Treves wrote that the village " straggles down hill like a small mountain stream.
Knowing that Merrick had always slept sitting upright, out of necessity, Treves came to the conclusion that he must have " made the experiment ", attempting to sleep lying down, trying to sleep like other people.
Entire communities, like those of Treves, Speyer, Worms, Mainz, and Cologne, were murdered by armed mobs.
Edmonsham House was built in 1589, and in 1905 was described by Sir Frederick Treves as " grey with age " and hence " like a mist in the wood ".

Treves and be
Eventually, the coronation had to be postponed and Edward had an operation performed by Frederick Treves of the London Hospital to drain the infected appendix.
After hearing Treves ' description of Merrick, and viewing the photographs, Crocker proposed that Merrick's condition might be a combination of dermatolysis, pachydermatocele and an unnamed bone deformity, all caused by changes in the nervous system.
Other allusions are to be found in Caesarius of Arles, Nicetiuis or Nicetae of Treves, and Gregory of Tours.
In 1905 in his Highways and Byways in Dorset, Sir Frederick Treves called the original " a fountain as may be be found in a suburban tea garden or in front of a gaudy Italian villa.

Treves and woman
He later told Treves that Maturin had been the first woman ever to smile at him, the first to shake his hand.
Treves believed that Merrick's hope was to go to live at an institution for the blind, where he might meet a woman who could not see his deformities.

Treves and help
Treves, with the help of Madge Kendal, arranged for him to attend the Christmas pantomime at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.
Lady Sheyrena an Treves and her brother Lorryn help the wizards by giving the young Lords iron jewelry, since most of them are treated no better than slaves.

Treves and him
He eventually made his way back to London ; unable to communicate, he was found by the police to have Frederick Treves ' card on him.
Treves visited him daily and the pair developed quite a close friendship.
Not long after Merrick's last examination with Frederick Treves, the police closed down Norman's shop on Whitechapel Road, and Merrick's Leicester managers withdrew him from Norman's care.
Treves visited him daily and spent a couple of hours with him every Sunday.
One day he expressed a desire to see inside what he considered a " real " house and Treves obliged, taking him to visit his Wimpole Street townhouse and meet his wife.
At around three o ' clock in the afternoon, Treves ' house surgeon visited Merrick and found him lying dead across his bed.
He resided for a time in Hamburg, but then left on a journey which took him to London, Treves, Brussels and New York City.

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