TexasEscapes.com HOME Welcome to Texas Escapes
A magazine written by Texas
Custom Search
New   |   Texas Towns   |   Ghost Towns   |   Counties   |   Trips   |   Features   |   Columns   |   Architecture   |   Images   |   Archives   |   Site Map

Columns
History/Opinion


Texas | Columns | "It's All Trew"

Coal oil was useful
all-purpose
home remedy

by Delbert Trew
Delbert Trew
Recently, while browsing through a stack of books at a garage sale, I found a modern day medical encyclopedia. Priced at $1, the book was a bargain, so I took it home to read.

I was amazed at the number of diseases and maladies listed I had never heard of before.

I was equally amazed at the remedies and cures offered and thought how useful the information would have been during my childhood. Everyone was poor, had little money for medicines or doctors and used home remedies on all but serious illnesses.


For headache, lie down with a cold washrag on your forehead. For binding intestinal problems, mineral oil or castor oil usually provided relief. For internal problems of the opposite nature, take a few spoons full of flour paste.

For croup, coughs, or pneumonia you were treated with Vicks, Mentholatum or camphor. If the problems persisted, add a dash of coal oil to the cough syrup and another dash to the hot cloth being applied to your chest or throat. All surface wounds of any type were soaked in coal oil daily to prevent infection.

My big toe, wounded over 50 years ago by a wayward post hole digger, rested in coal oil each day for weeks. Today, when I trim the toenail, I can still smell a hint of coal oil in the air.

Aunt Ida, who as a little girl in Oklahoma Territory, jumped off the porch onto a rusty nail in a piece of firewood and nearly lost a foot in the process. The doctor finally gave up and told her to go home and soak the wound in coal oil twice a day and pray for healing. The remedy worked.


As I suspected, a detailed search of the book did not show coal oil as a recommended remedy for any malady. I now believe use of the concoction was for purely psychological reasons. The taste and smell was so terrible no one complained again after being dosed.

The story is told of a Dust Bowl-era employee with a drinking problem. When he caught the whooping cough, Grandma Trew cured his cough and his drinking problem with a combination of whiskey, lemon and coal oil, warmed slightly. Again, psychology and the horrible taste might have had significant influence on the cure.

I recall one time after Grandma Trew treated me with a generous dose of coal oil and castor oil, Grandpa Trew mischievously whispered a warning not to pass gas while standing against a hot wood stove.


© Delbert Trew
"It's All Trew" April 1 , 2004 column

Related Articles

  • Hot Air Verses by Mike Cox

  • Childhood medications were simple, gave relief by Delbert Trew

  • Home remedies would cure or kill you by Delbert Trew

  • Wasp Sting by Delbert Trew

  • Memory tickled by itch of childhood ailments by Delbert Trew

  • Water producers, grandmas make miracles by Delbert Trew
    Of all the strange, weird and confusing bits of history, none quite compare with rain dancers, water witchers and grandmas. Each could perform miracles if the sign was right, a fresh peach tree twig was used or the malady could be cured with Castor Oil or Black Draught Tonic...

  • Inventions sprung from filling needs by Delbert Trew
    As a child I could always tell when my Grandmother Trew was near as I could smell the odor of Mentholatum. A close friend said his grandmother always smelled like Vicks and his uncle smelled like Bay Rum. Most old families had a relative or two who smelled like vanilla flavoring, especially if you resided in a dry county...

  • WPA aided America's health by Delbert Trew
    History records that between 1830 and 1860, epidemics of typhoid fever and cholera claimed thousands of lives across America. Between the epidemics, the third leading cause of death was amoebic dysentery and as a result of these scourges the average life expectancy in the United States was 47 years. Later research proved that most of the epidemics could be blamed on improper waste disposal allowing contaminated sewage into domestic water supplies...

  • Warts by Bob Bowman
    If you grew up in the country, miles away from the nearest doctor, home remedies were something you accepted routinely....

  • Poke Sallet by Bob Bowman
    "Poke sallet is the best spring tonic you can find; it gets your blood going."

  • Folk Medicine by Clay Coppedge
    "Today we can drive the countryside and see grasses, flowers, weeds, critters, trees and the like. Modern-day herbalists and naturalists can still see a drug store..."

  • "Get the Epsom Salt. This Kids Got Dew Poisoning" by N. Ray Maxie
    Grandmothers of the past four or five generations in NE Texas around Atlanta, aren't the only ones to know the benefits of Epsom Salt. That age-old compound is gaining more and more attention these days for...

  • The Healing Hands from Mississippi

  • Kerosene Stops Severe Bleeding by N. Ray Maxie

  • Skunk Oil, Jackrabbits, and Red Roosters by Lois Zook Wauson

  • Medicinal Kerosene by Jeanne Diver Goff

  • Psychic Persimmons by Dana Goolsby
    Folklore reveals that superstitions about cutting persimmon trees may help cure warts, cancer and even predict weather, even Texas weather.

  • Related Topic
    Health

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


    Texas Escapes Online Magazine »   Archive Issues » Home »
    TEXAS TOWNS & COUNTIES TEXAS LANDMARKS & IMAGES TEXAS HISTORY & CULTURE TEXAS OUTDOORS MORE
    Texas Counties
    Texas Towns A-Z
    Texas Ghost Towns

    TEXAS REGIONS:
    Central Texas North
    Central Texas South
    Texas Gulf Coast
    Texas Panhandle
    Texas Hill Country
    East Texas
    South Texas
    West Texas

    Courthouses
    Jails
    Churches
    Schoolhouses
    Bridges
    Theaters
    Depots
    Rooms with a Past
    Monuments
    Statues

    Gas Stations
    Post Offices
    Museums
    Water Towers
    Grain Elevators
    Cotton Gins
    Lodges
    Stores
    Banks

    Vintage Photos
    Historic Trees
    Cemeteries
    Old Neon
    Ghost Signs
    Signs
    Murals
    Gargoyles
    Pitted Dates
    Cornerstones
    Then & Now

    Columns: History/Opinion
    Texas History
    Small Town Sagas
    Black History
    WWII
    Texas Centennial
    Ghosts
    People
    Animals
    Food
    Music
    Art

    Books
    Cotton
    Texas Railroads

    Texas Trips
    Texas Drives
    Texas State Parks
    Texas Rivers
    Texas Lakes
    Texas Forts
    Texas Trails
    Texas Maps
    USA
    MEXICO
    HOTELS

    Site Map
    About Us
    Privacy Statement
    Disclaimer
    Contributors
    Staff
    Contact Us

     
    Website Content Copyright Texas Escapes LLC. All Rights Reserved