January 4, 2007
The Homeopathy Monument
Washington is full of monuments to famous people -- Washington, Jefferson, Einstein, Hahnemann. Hahnemann? Not a forgotten vice president or a general, Christian Friedrich Samuel Hahnemann was the founder of homeopathic medicine. His impressive monument, located at 16th and Massachusetts NW near Scott Circle, isn't too helpful -- it says "HAHNEMANN" on the top, as if everybody knows who he is. There are also a few Latin and German sayings (he was born in Saxony in 1755), with one explaining he founded the homeopathic school of medicine. For those not familiar with homeopathy (i.e. most of us), Wikipedia says homeopathic medicine is an alternative medicine (which some call a pseudoscience) that aims to cure diseases by giving the patient a low potency dose of something similar to the disease, and that diseases are caused by chronic "miasms," not germs. Wikipedia uses the example of giving the saliva of a rabid dog to somebody with rabies. That sounds safe.
So why is he here? Why not a famous acupuncturist or chiropractor? One reason is that the statue was funded entirely by donations to the American Institute of Homeopathy, and they claim the sitting president, McKinley, was a supporter of homeopathy (among others). And it is impressive looking -- a large bronze Hahnemann sitting on a big chair under a half dome with a bright mosaic, surrounded by a semicircle of curving bronze reliefs of him at work. Homeopaths really love the guy - the AIH's website says the rededication of the statue in 2000 was "a once in a life time experience."
The sculptor, American Charles Henry Niehaus, has more sculptures in the statuary hall in the Capitol than any other sculptor, including the only one to be removed, Kansas governor George W. Glick, who was replaced by the slightly more famous Dwight D. Eisenhower. (Though California legislators voted for Ronald Reagan to replace Thomas Starr King). And as we mentioned before, there are no D.C. statues in the hall. The monument's architect was Julius F. Harder, who also worked at the Chicago World's Fair.
But besides the fact that it was virtually free to the government, the Institute must have had advertising on their mind, trying to get their doctrine some publicity and validation. Compare Hahnemann's ornate, look-at-me statue to Einstein's relaxed, bumpy seated figure hidden behind some trees, or American doctor Benjamin Rush, who's just standing there at the Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery at 23rd and E NW. It makes one wonder why other controversial groups don't try to get their most famous person on a statue in D.C.
The statue, dedicated June 21, 1900 and rededicated 100 years later, cost about $75,000 in 1900 dollars, or about $1.7 million in today's dollars. It is located just east of Scott Circle NW.
Photo by flickr user rosefirerising

Thanks. Always walk by this and never knew who he was..
So *this* is the guy responsible for HeadOn? Thanks a lot, jerk!
HEAD ON! APPLY DIRECTLY TO THE FOREHEAD!
One spring I had a bout of allergies so bad that I resorted to a homeopathic remedy because my prescription meds and OTC meds weren't responding, and I was desperate. Bad decision, as they made me even worse. I literally wanted to die or be put in an induced coma.
The pills must have been made of concentrated cat dander, tree pollen, and ragweed.
Apparently DC was a big part of the Homeopathic movement. I was born at Homeopathic Hospital which was at about 2nd and M, NW.
Thank you thank you. I walk past this fabulous monument every day and had been keen to know who Mr. Hahnemann was. It's nice to inject some trivia into the day...
NPS just finished (or is about to) another restoration this past year. I've been told that mosaic is an original Tiffany. In any event, it's extraordinary.
It also features prominently in a tear-jerking scene in Team America: World Police...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Is3icfcbmbs&mode=related&search=
Ah, homeopathy, the form of "medicine" that states all laws of biology, chemistry, and physics are completely wrong. Where's our statue of Franz Joseph Gall, founder of phrenology, damnit?
Yeah, homeopathy seems complete BS...but it is a pretty monument that I walk by every day. Thanks to the commenter who pointed out that it is featured in Team America. I can't walk by it every morning without hearing "America. F-Yeah!" in my head.
I was also born at the National Homeopathic Hospital in 1948. I don't believe true "homeopathy" was really practiced there at the time, since the general medical establishment didn't really embrace the concept. After all, why should low doses of anything, giving subtherapeutic levels of a medication, have much of an effect? The advent of clinical trials to determine efficacy has helped to clarify the role of homeopathy.
Hahnemann also had a medical school and hospital named after him - Drexel University College of Medicine in Philadelphia was known as Hahnemann Medical College from 1869 until Drexel took it over, and Hahnemann University Hospital exists today at N. Broad and Vine Streets.