Home Voices LOCAL HISTORY: Walter Reed’s Inspiring Life and Bittersweet Memory Lingers in the Blue Ridge
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LOCAL HISTORY: Walter Reed’s Inspiring Life and Bittersweet Memory Lingers in the Blue Ridge

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Walter Reed created a remarkable life. His inspiring journey into medicine and science took him throughout the United States and also on a dangerous mission to Cuba. Reed left behind a legacy still celebrated today, noted for a milestone career as a biomedical researcher and remembered as a kind and devoted family man.

Reed adored the natural world and never felt totally at peace within cities. After decades of travel and hard work, when it was finally time to own his first property, Walter Reed bought a 12-acre local tract in the Blue Ridge Mountains. He built a home for his family there, but sadly had little time to enjoy it.

Walter Reed was born in Virginia in 1851. The fifth child of a traveling Methodist minister, young Walter grew up in North Carolina. Later, Walter’s father remarried and moved his children back to Virginia. While living in Charlottesville, Walter decided to pursue a medical career, and at age 17 became the youngest graduate to ever earn a medical degree from the University of Virginia.

Walter Reed graduated with a medical degree at 17 and then began a long career in the U.S. Military

Still a teenager, Walter Reed didn’t rest on that accomplishment. After attaining a second M.D. at New York University’s Bellevue Hospital Medical College, Reed joined the U.S. Army Medical Corp in 1875. He took his new bride Emily Lawrence Reed out west, and the couple started a family there. Son Walter Lawrence Reed was born at Arizona’s Fort Apache in 1877, and daughter Emily entered the world in 1883 while the Reed’s were stationed in Nebraska.

Daughter Emily, known as Blossom, recalled her parents’ fond reminisces about witnessing vivid sunsets in the desert southwest. Blossom developed a passion for nature too, inspired by her parents and their travels. The family moved back east in 1893, following Walter’s upward career arc. Reed became a Professor of Bacteriology at the George Washington University School of Medicine at Washington DC’s U.S. Army Medical College.

Walter Reed with his daughter Blossom

When the family arrived at DC’s swampy landscape, Reed was drawn into investigating the cause of a Yellow Fever outbreak. Yellow Fever decimated many city populations in the 1800s- thousands died- and the exact cause of the horrible disease was unknown. Many experts thought the affliction was caused by drinking river water, but Reed proved that theory wrong through his Washington research.

Another Yellow Fever theory suggested an evil pest was present in Reed’s beloved natural world, one that caused the disease’s contraction and spread. That particular belief had many skeptics. To solve the mystery, Walter Reed traveled to Cuba where Yellow Fever was prominent, to lead a team of medical researchers. Reed followed this tropical path to eventual worldwide acclaim.

Cuban epidemiologist Carlos Finlay had proposed Yellow Fever was carried and spread by a nuisance insect, the mosquito. Reed and his team used willing humans as test subjects, purposely infecting them with the disease. Jesse Lazear, an assistant and friend of Reed’s, eventually died from Yellow Fever. Throughout this dangerous work, Reed worked closely with Finlay to prove the mosquito transmission theory was indeed correct. As a result of Reed’s experiments and confirmed discovery, thousands of lives were saved in the years ahead.

Reeds Cuban research proved mosquitos transmitted Yellow Fever, saving thousands of lives

After this medical breakthrough, Reed still lived in the muggy summer climate of Washington DC. But the future looked bright for the Reed family. Some speculated Walter Reed would be the next U.S. Surgeon General or win a Nobel Prize for his research.

Seeking a break from urban life, and anxious to own a retreat in nature, the Reed’s bought their first property in 1899. They chose a secluded lot in Cascade, Maryland, near the Pennsylvania border-town aptly named Blue Ridge Summit.

At the turn of the century, this mountaintop area became a summer haven for prominent East coast families and travelers, serving as a second home or vacation destination. Many hotels sprung up in the shade of Appalachian forests. The mild alpine climate provided welcome relief from lowland heat and humidity.

The Reed’s spent several summers building their new home. The named it ‘Keewaydin’, which reportedly was a Native American term for ‘west wind’. The charming house was constructed on a hillside with native stone and wood, sporting brown shingles. The front façade faced west and presented a memorable impression, with certain house portions extending forward, while other sections receded. Porches were included on both the second and ground levels, designed to enjoy grand vistas of the surrounding Cumberland Valley.

View of Keewaydin summer home of the Reed family

The interior presented a rustic appearance, with an open-beam ceiling and large stone fireplace. Blossom Reed remembered a motto hung above their hearth that read: “Love ever by my fireside and peace within my door”. With many windows, the house offered outward views toward a lush exterior landscape. Four bedrooms were situated upstairs, with the Reed’s light-filled master bedroom located in the front.

The Reeds put equal thought and toil into the home’s grounds. A walk through a grape arbor led to a terraced garden. Walter and Emily Reed cleared undergrowth to plant flower beds, vegetable gardens, and fruit trees. Two rose arbors bore blooms colored red and pink. Boys in big farm hats helped build stone walls to mark the property’s boundaries.

Blossom wrote about her parents’ love for each other and for nature. “Our garden affords a walk for lovers. My father holds my mother’s hand and calls her sweetheart. I watch them and wonder will I ever be so happy when I grow up?”

When the house was finally completed, the Reed women spent their summers at Keewaydin, with periodic visits by Major Reed, who worked tirelessly at his Washington laboratory. He wrote letters to his ‘darling girls’ often, saying to wife Emily in one note: “I hope you have been able to see the valley. I am anxious to return to the summit.” Walter’s weekend visits thrilled his wife and daughter. Then on Mondays, the pair waved a sad goodbye as he stood on the train platform, preparing to trek down the mountain and return to his necessary DC duties.

On each visit to the blue ridge, Walter Reed and his family made grand future plans for their home. Walter proudly surveyed his first property, and envisioned summers filled with friends and family. They would raise chickens and pigs, own horses and a cow, and work happily in their landscaped gardens. When the last days of September brought a tinge of fall color to the mountains, the Reed family packed suitcases and reluctantly returned to their Washington apartment.

Walter Reeds love of nature brought he and his family to the Blue Ridge Mountains

In the autumn of 1902, teenage Blossom Reed prepared to make her debut. She would wear a white dress decorated with satin ribbon edged with pearls. But Blossom became deeply depressed. An interior voice spoke, and Blossom experienced an awful premonition. “Something dreadful is going to happen on the 17th of November,” she heard. That voice trapped inside interrupted her dreams, and as November arrived Blossom grew restless and afraid.

Walter Reed suffered a ruptured appendix on November 17th and was taken from his Washington office to the Army Hospital. Blossom kissed him as he lay on a stretcher. The two Reed women comforted each other for five long nights, praying for Walter’s recovery. On the sixth night, Blossom rushed to her father. “I looked down on a face wrought with pain,” she remembered. “His hands were cold. I knelt at his bedside as he whispered, ‘Little daughter’, his last words on earth.” Walter Reed died on November 23, 1902, aged 51.

Blossom returned heartbroken to Emily- her mother too distraught to leave home. “I am 19 now and must be a brave woman and help take care of my mother,” Blossom wrote about that terrible night. Walter Reed was later buried on a scenic hillside in Arlington National Cemetery.

The next summer, the Reed women returned to Keewaydin. On that mountain property they felt closest to Walter’s departed soul. A neighbor greeted them and bowed his head. “He was a grand man,” he said, “I can’t think about him without crying.” Emily and Blossom’s deep affection for a devoted husband and tender father never dimmed. The house remained in the family until 1921, when it was sold to a new owner. But the Reed women never permanently left the blue ridge. Keewaydin survives today, 125 years after being built by the slim, well-mannered Doctor.

Reed was honored as an American hero. In 1912, the Walter Reed Medal was posthumously awarded to him, and to later honorees for research in tropical medicine. Earlier in 1909, Walter Reed General Hospital was founded in Washington DC. This institution later became the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, a famed healthcare facility where veterans and U.S. Presidents receive the finest medical care.

Walter Reed Postage Stamp Issued in 1940

A U.S. postage stamp also honored Reed. A Broadway play (with a film adaptation), PBS documentary, and biographies have all celebrated Reed’s contributions to medical science and public safety.

But Walter Reed’s family story didn’t end with his death. His son, Walter Lawrence Reed, achieved great success in the U.S. Army, achieving the rank of Major General. The two Emily Reeds, with the daughter known as Blossom, continued their love affair with the blue ridge and contributed to local society for many future decades. More tales about their interesting dual lives will be highlighted in part two of this series.

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