A couple of weeks ago I put the finishing touches to my latest book and uploaded it to a publisher. That should have produced a sense of satisfaction. Two years’ worth of research completed, 85,000 words written, rewritten and polished. Instead I felt more like muttering, “Good riddance, I never want to see that wretched book again.”
Young woman typing, c 1906
Not that I haven’t enjoyed writing the book. But I’d just spent several days trying to get the footnotes looking half-sensible. The publisher didn’t require any particular style of footnote at this stage, but since it’s a non-fiction book, I did need to demonstrate that it was properly sourced.
The problems started when I moved the manuscript from Scrivener, the programme I used to write the book, to the word-processing programme I was using to edit it into the format the publisher required. Suddenly my nicely formatted footnotes appeared with Roman numerals. With over 300 footnotes, that didn’t look pretty. Who numbers a footnote ‘cclxxxviii’?
Several hours later, armed with information gleaned from various websites and forums, I got the footnotes numbered correctly. But then I noticed that every time I closed the file and re-opened it, a space would be added in front of each one. Deleting the spaces was futile, they just kept reappearing. More Googling and asking questions on forums revealed that this was a known quirk of the programme I was using.
To cut a long story short, I eventually managed to solve the problem using a different programme. The book is finished, the file is uploaded, and now I’m waiting patiently (because what else can I do?) to see if the publisher will accept it. And wondering what my next project will be. Stay tuned.
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During my research for The Edward Street Baby Farm (which is almost finished) I’ve come across some interesting, strange, and even bizarre characters living in Western Australia in the early 1900s. A few get a brief mention in my book, including the indomitable Mrs Tracey. Jessica Barratt has told her story in wonderful detail on her blog. Another is Harcourt Whipple Ellis. Even the little I’ve learned about him suggests that he was a colourful and slippery character.
Ellis arrived in Western Australia from Melbourne, having been born somewhere in England. (He constantly changed his story about where he was born). He made his way to the goldfields, where, in 1894 he was charged with unlawfully wounding a man, John Dougatt. In court, Ellis argued that he had shot Dougatt in self defence. The case seems to have been adjourned indefinitely, after an elusive witness for the defence failed to arrive at the court.
In 1896 he popped up again, this time in Roebourne, when he nominated for the Northern Province seat in the Legislative Council. Advertisements at the time described him as a chemist. Apparently he wasn’t elected, because in 1897 he was in the news again. This time he appeared in the Roebourne Police Court charged with selling potassium cyanide without labelling it as poison or asking the buyer what it was to be used for. The magistrate fined him two pounds.
The following year he was in court again, for having sold medicine to a coloured man. The problem, it seems, was that Ellis wasn’t registered to prescribe medicine. In September 1899 he was charged with “attending, examining and prescribing” for two people without being registered under the Medical Practitioners Act. He was found guilty of one charge and fined.
New qualifications
Undeterred, he began describing himself as a “Lecturer and Clinical Demonstrator in the Kobe School of Medicine”. In January 1901 he advertised himself as the contact person for those wishing to become understudies to the Japanese Government Bacteriologist, Mr Jiro Kamasitti. Applicants were advised that a fee of one thousand guineas per year was payable in advance to a Japanese bank (presumably through him). At the time Ellis was back living in Boulder, on the goldfields. In March the Sun newspaper in Kalgoorlie devoted a full column to describing this wonder living among them and the superiority of Japanese medicine (an article written, I suspect, by Ellis himself.)
In 1902 he began advertising his services as a dentist and “oculist” (that is, a specialist in eye diseases). By now he was making much of the fact that he bore a strong resemblance to the King, Edward VII. He also took a dig at the police, pointing out that his practice was just across the road from the police station.
Ellis’ advert in The Sun, 23 March 1902
The family man
Ellis had left a wife and four children in Victoria when he came to Western Australia. In June 1902 his wife, Martha, sued him for desertion and neglect. The court gave her custody of the children and ordered Ellis to pay regular maintenance. During the case, Martha said that Harcourt Whipple Ellis had been an engineer when she married him!
Ellis moved his dental practice to William Street in Perth, to a shop known as “The Jewel of Asia”. The charges laid against him soon became much more serious. In November 1902 a young woman, Maud Pingelly, died in his dental chair. It came out that her death was due to complications of “an illegal operation” ie an abortion. Tragically, during the long court case, the woman’s boyfriend committed suicide by drowning. Ellis was acquitted, on the grounds that not enough evidence existed to prove that he had performed the abortion.
In 1903 Ellis was in arrears with his family maintenance and filed for bankruptcy. He was sent to prison for three months. After his release he returned to Roebourne (to avoid Martha?) where he wrote long articles for the newspapers. But by 1906 he was back in Perth, practising as a dental surgeon in Wellington Street.
Another appearance in court
It wasn’t long before the police charged him with having performed another abortion, or more precisely, with “using an instrument with unlawful intent”. Fortunately this time the young woman, Eliza Murphy, didn’t die. The case became a sensation when the police arrested Dr Swanston, a well-known local doctor, and charged with the same offence. Dr Swanston argued that Ellis called him in to help after Miss Murphy had a miscarriage. After a long trial, at which the medical witnesses could not agree, the pair were found not guilty.
This case led to my discovery of Harcourt Whipple Ellis, since it competed for space in the newspapers in early 1907 with the trial I was following, that of Alice Mitchell. Unfortunately I haven’t had time to find out what happened to Ellis after 1907, although it seems he continued to offer his services as a dentist who did abortions on the side. In 1940, when he was turning ninety, the Mirror offered this highly imaginative account of his life. The Sunday Times printed a somewhat whitewashed obituary when he died in 1944.
Keep up to date with what I’m writing by joining my Readers List.
As a subscriber you’ll receive a monthly newsletter, ‘The Scribbler’, straight into your email inbox. The Scribbler includes interesting articles not published anywhere else, useful tips and hints, and news about what I’m writing. You can read a sample here. I’ll also send you a link to download a free information sheet, ‘Eight online resources for history lovers’.
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