SUBJECTS OF CORRESPONDENCE Natural history, anthropology, the Lyceum
POSITION Owner, Shottum’s Cabinet of Natural Productions and Curiosities New York
DATES OF CORRESPONDENCE 1869–1881
CORRESPONDENT Prof. Albert Blackwood
SUBJECTS OF CORRESPONDENCE The Lyceum, the Museum
POSITION Founder, New York Museum of Natural History
DATES OF CORRESPONDENCE 1865–1878
CORRESPONDENT Dr. Asa Stone Gilcrease
SUBJECTS OF CORRESPONDENCE Birds
POSITION Ornithologist New York
DATES OF CORRESPONDENCE 1875–1887
CORRESPONDENT Col. Sir Henry C. Throckmorton, Bart., F.R.S.
SUBJECTS OF CORRESPONDENCE African mammals (big game)
POSITION Collector, explorer sportsman London
DATES OF CORRESPONDENCE 1879–1891
CORRESPONDENT Prof. Enoch Leng
SUBJECTS OF CORRESPONDENCE Classification
POSITION Taxonomist, chemist New York
DATES OF CORRESPONDENCE 1872–1881
CORRESPONDENT Miss Guenevere LaRue
SUBJECTS OF CORRESPONDENCE Christian missions for Borrioboola-Gha, in the African Congo
POSITION Philanthropist New York
DATES OF CORRESPONDENCE 1870–1872
CORRESPONDENT Dumont Burleigh
SUBJECTS OF CORRESPONDENCE Dinosaur fossils, the Lyceum
POSITION Oilman, collector Cold Spring, New York
DATES OF CORRESPONDENCE 1875–1881
CORRESPONDENT Dr. Ferdinand Huntt
SUBJECTS OF CORRESPONDENCE Anthropology, archaeology
POSITION Surgeon, collector Oyster Bay, Long Island
DATES OF CORRESPONDENCE 1869–1879
CORRESPONDENT Prof. Hiram Howlett
SUBJECTS OF CORRESPONDENCE Reptiles and amphibians
POSITION Herpetologist Stormhaven, Maine
DATES OF CORRESPONDENCE 1871–1873
The penultimate name gave her pause. A surgeon. Who was Dr. Ferdinand Huntt? There were quite a few letters from him, written in a large scrawl on heavy paper with a beautifully engraved crest. She flipped through them.
My Dear Tinbury,
With regard to the Odinga Natives, the barbaric custom of Male Partum is still quite prevalent. When I was in the Volta I had the dubious privilege of witnessing childbirth. I was not allowed to assist, of course, but I could hear the shrieks of the husband quite clearly as the wife jerked on the rope affixed to his genitalia with every contraction she experienced. I treated the poor man’s injuries—severe lacerations—following the birth . . .
My Dear Tinbury,
The Olmec Jade phallus I herewith enclose from La Venta, Mexico, is for the Museum, as I understand you have nothing from that extremely curious Mexican culture . . .
She sorted through the packet of correspondence, but it was again all in the same vein: Dr. Huntt describing various bizarre medical customs he had witnessed in his travels across Central America and Africa, along with notes that had apparently accompanied artifacts sent back to the Museum. He seemed to have an unhealthy interest in native sexual practices; it made him a prime candidate in Nora’s mind.