Living History: Nurse to George Washington Carver an Inventor Herself

 ========= Old Image Removed =========Array
(
    [_wp_attached_file] => Array
        (
            [0] => 2018/05/MelonezeTells_4170-scaled.jpg
        )

    [_wp_attachment_metadata] => Array
        (
            [0] => a:6:{s:5:"width";i:2560;s:6:"height";i:1920;s:4:"file";s:37:"2018/05/MelonezeTells_4170-scaled.jpg";s:5:"sizes";a:14:{s:6:"medium";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:30:"MelonezeTells_4170-336x252.jpg";s:5:"width";i:336;s:6:"height";i:252;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:5:"large";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:30:"MelonezeTells_4170-771x578.jpg";s:5:"width";i:771;s:6:"height";i:578;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:9:"thumbnail";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:30:"MelonezeTells_4170-140x140.jpg";s:5:"width";i:140;s:6:"height";i:140;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:12:"medium_large";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:30:"MelonezeTells_4170-768x576.jpg";s:5:"width";i:768;s:6:"height";i:576;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:9:"1536x1536";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:32:"MelonezeTells_4170-1536x1152.jpg";s:5:"width";i:1536;s:6:"height";i:1152;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:9:"2048x2048";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:32:"MelonezeTells_4170-2048x1536.jpg";s:5:"width";i:2048;s:6:"height";i:1536;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:9:"wbhm-icon";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:28:"MelonezeTells_4170-80x80.jpg";s:5:"width";i:80;s:6:"height";i:80;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:13:"wbhm-featured";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:30:"MelonezeTells_4170-600x338.jpg";s:5:"width";i:600;s:6:"height";i:338;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:20:"wbhm-featured-square";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:30:"MelonezeTells_4170-600x600.jpg";s:5:"width";i:600;s:6:"height";i:600;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:18:"wbhm-featured-home";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:30:"MelonezeTells_4170-415x311.jpg";s:5:"width";i:415;s:6:"height";i:311;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:22:"wbhm-featured-carousel";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:30:"MelonezeTells_4170-353x265.jpg";s:5:"width";i:353;s:6:"height";i:265;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:28:"ab-block-post-grid-landscape";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:30:"MelonezeTells_4170-600x400.jpg";s:5:"width";i:600;s:6:"height";i:400;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:25:"ab-block-post-grid-square";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:30:"MelonezeTells_4170-600x600.jpg";s:5:"width";i:600;s:6:"height";i:600;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:14:"post-thumbnail";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:30:"MelonezeTells_4170-125x125.jpg";s:5:"width";i:125;s:6:"height";i:125;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}}s:10:"image_meta";a:12:{s:8:"aperture";s:1:"0";s:6:"credit";s:0:"";s:6:"camera";s:0:"";s:7:"caption";s:0:"";s:17:"created_timestamp";s:1:"0";s:9:"copyright";s:0:"";s:12:"focal_length";s:1:"0";s:3:"iso";s:1:"0";s:13:"shutter_speed";s:1:"0";s:5:"title";s:0:"";s:11:"orientation";s:1:"0";s:8:"keywords";a:0:{}}s:14:"original_image";s:22:"MelonezeTells_4170.jpg";}
        )

    [_media_credit] => Array
        (
            [0] => Dan Carsen
        )

    [_navis_media_credit_org] => Array
        (
            [0] =>  WBHM
        )

    [_navis_media_can_distribute] => Array
        (
            [0] => 
        )

    [_rs_image_updated] => Array
        (
            [0] => 1
        )

    [_edit_lock] => Array
        (
            [0] => 1594226916:26
        )

)
1618848360 
1525698572

Ninety-seven-year-old Meloneze Robinson of Tuskegee has witnessed history, and as a nurse, she’s made some of her own. She cared for renowned inventor George Washington Carver at the end of his life. Fifteen years later, she patented a surgical device after assisting with amputations at the former Tuskegee Veterans Hospital.

She had to grasp and steady the patients’ legs during the procedures. She thought to herself, there must be a better way:

“I said ‘one day, I’m going to make an instrument to hold that.’”

She worked on it for a decade. Then she drafted a patent for the “amputation surgery limb support.” It was granted in 1958. The device was used for at least 20 years.patent-photo

Robinson was born in 1921 in rural Clayton, Alabama, one of eight siblings who survived; three were stillborn. She says her father was one of few black men who owned land, and one of few cotton farmers who thwarted serious boll weevil infestations. He burned kerosene-soaked rags in and around the fields to smoke out the insects. But overall, she says, life was hard.

“During that time, they didn’t have high-schooling for blacks,” she remembers. “My parents took three of us to Abbeville, Alabama [in] Henry County. The faculty there were graduates of Tuskegee Institute College. So, Doctor George Washington Carver came to Tuskegee College, and it was in the paper. Mama would say, ‘You’re going to Tuskegee College when you finish high school.’ So I said, ‘I’m going to write Doctor Carver.’ He wrote me back that same week, told me what to do, and I did it. They sent me an application: 1940, going to college!”

Her mother sold some of the family cows so Robinson could attend.

“So I had my 80 dollars to register — I am going to be a nurse!”

Robinson was always curious about living things.

“You know what I used to do when I was a kid? I’d catch a frog, kill him, and operate on him — look at his heart, his intestines, his lungs, his brains.”

And that curiosity brought her an early experience with home remedies — and pain — when she tried to examine a bumble bee.

“Momma said, ‘he’s gonna sting you!’ But I didn’t know what a stinger was. Oooh, he stung me! I screamed and hollered … She put it in some vinegar. That took care of it.”

George Washington Carver

Frances B. Johnson
George Washington Carver

She was always fascinated with chemistry and healing. So was George Washington Carver, who became her patient later in life. Robinson says Carver was generous, too.

“Guess who paid my tuition? He did. And I didn’t know it. But Doctor Carver paid it for three years [because] I’d stayed in contact. So when I came to college, he was here and that’s when I saw him in person. We would go to class, in nursing. And on my nursing tray, where I kept all my medicine, I had a little flower or a green leaf or something on that tray.”

So Carver had reasons to remember Meloneze Robinson. And that lasted right up to the end of his life.

“Doctor George Washington Carver got sick. He had a heart problem … I was his nurse. They’d said, ‘Pick your nurse, Doctor Carver.’ So he chose me because he knew of me. So I was his nurse. And when they took him back to his apartment, that’s where he died in 1943.”

To hear Robinson’s thoughts on her doctor and doctor shortages in the rural South, check this previous WBHM story

 

Alabama’s racial, ethnic health disparities are ‘more severe’ than other states, report says

Data from the Commonwealth Fund show that the quality of care people receive and their health outcomes worsened because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

What’s your favorite thing about Alabama?

That's the question we put to those at our recent News and Brews community pop-ups at Hop City and Saturn in Birmingham.

Q&A: A former New Orleans police chief says it’s time the U.S. changes its marijuana policy

Ronal Serpas is one of 32 law enforcement leaders who signed a letter sent to President Biden in support of moving marijuana to a Schedule III drug.

How food stamps could play a key role in fixing Jackson’s broken water system

JXN Water's affordability plan aims to raise much-needed revenue while offering discounts to customers in need, but it is currently tied up in court.

Alabama mine cited for federal safety violations since home explosion led to grandfather’s death, grandson’s injuries

Following a home explosion that killed one and critically injured another, residents want to know more about the mine under their community. So far, their questions have largely gone unanswered.

Crawfish prices are finally dropping, but farmers and fishers are still struggling

Last year’s devastating drought in Louisiana killed off large crops of crawfish, leading to a tough season for farmers, fishers and seafood lovers.

More Arts and Culture Coverage