Use of Laudanum in the Mid-19th Century

Authors continue to research aspects of their plots throughout the drafting and revising of their novels. For my current work-in-progress, I’ve had to revisit old research topics, and today’s post discusses a new line of research. (I hope no one ever researches my web search history. It is full of violent topics.)

I’ve decided one of the characters in my next novel will be addicted to laudanum. She is an older woman with a sad past, and I need a reason for some of her actions to be unpredictable. I also need a way to get her “off stage” on occasion, and a drug-induced stupor will work well for that purpose.

Many women in the mid-19th century did become addicted to opium through use of laudanum and other “tonics,” which were often advertised for female complaints. So having my character searching for her “cordial” at various points in the plot seems to work.

Ad for medicines, including laudanum, The Oregon Argus, Oregon-City, March 28, 1857, p. 4

Laudanum is a tincture made by dissolving opium extracts in alcohol. It contains both morphine and codeine. It was used until the early 20th century for many purposes, including to reduce pain, promote sleep, alleviate coughing, and soothe the digestive tract. Women often used it to relieve menstrual cramps, but many women used it to alleviate a wide assortment of “nervous conditions.”

For adults, two popular tonics containing laudanum were Godfrey’s Cordial and Dalby’s Carminative. Both were English drugs that were imported to the United States from the very inception of the American colonies.

Soon, however, these and similar drugs were manufactured in the U.S. more than they were imported. (A recipe for Dalby’s Carminative can be found here.) These medicines were so popular and so ubiquitous that every druggist was expected to have them on hand. Various versions of these tincures were sold in the U.S. until after 1900. Without a Food and Drug Administration to approve medications, anyone could buy these drugs over the counter.

Adults weren’t the only people treated with laudanum and similar drugs. Children also were give opium syrups. One popular patent medicine containing laudanum was Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup. This syrup contained morphine and was sold as a medicine to soothe teething babies. It was even advertised as “a mother’s friend.”

Laudanum is a very strong opium tincture, and it was frequently the cause of intentional and unintentional deaths in the 19th century. A quick perusal of Oregon newspapers found several reports of individuals attempting (and often succeeding) at suicide by ingesting laudanum.

Blurb from The State Rights Democrat, Albany, OR, September 13, 1872, p. 2

So my character’s laudanum addiction will be a useful plot device. I need to spend some time rewriting earlier chapters of the book to add in allusions to her dependency. Still, the time it will take to rewrite will strengthn the novel. Her addiction is a better plot device than some of the orchestrations I wrote earlier to get her out of scenes conveniently. It makes her character more believable, while leading more naturally to a plot twist between two other characters.

Of course, I’m still writing the first draft of the book, so who knows what will end up in the published version?

Writers, when have you had to rewrite your novels to make the plot work better?

Posted in History, Writing and tagged , , , .

6 Comments

  1. Very interesting post. I believe one of Wyatt Earp’s wives, Mattie, died of a laudanum overdose in the late 1880’s and it was ruled a suicide.

  2. There is another curative tincture that I discovered in the Blarney Castle’s “poison garden.” Belladonna is a sedative, that addresses coughing, Parkinson’s, IBS, and is a pain killer. The name means “beautiful woman” in Italian, as women throughout Europe, and perhaps the US too used it to enlarge their pupils to make their eyes look “dark and seductive.” This “medicine” may not have been as easily accessible to women in the American west, but it’s another drug that your character might have in her medicine cabinet. Demonstrating that she was REALLY addicted to not just one medicine but two.

  3. I always had read that laudanum was dangerous for people; prescribed by their doctors. I didn’t realize what was so dangerous about it. Being made of Opium and alcohol is a bad concoction. Giving it to children is an atrocious idea. Thanks so much for sharing!

    • Donna, laudanum was dangerous, though it was often used effectively. But I’m glad it is no longer the standard treatment for childhood coughs!
      Theresa

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