By Carl Swanson Special to OnMilwaukee.com Published Mar 13, 2015 at 9:01 AM

There has never been anyone quite like Orlando Williams Wight (who you can also read a bit about here). Entirely self-taught (he never attended a college or university), he was a medical doctor, lawyer, theologian, engineer, author of 12 books, editor of 38 more and – for a few extremely eventful years in the late 1870s – Milwaukee’s Commissioner of Health.

Armed with broad legal authority and an off-the-charts level of drive and focus, Wight encouraged, cajoled, argued and, if all else failed, outright bullied business and civic leaders into sweeping public heath reforms.

Wight was born in 1824 in Centreville, N.Y. As a child he would frequently complete a full day’s schoolwork in a half-day and reward himself by spending the remaining hours translating Greek classics for fun. By the age of 16, he was working as a schoolteacher. Moving to New York City, Wight taught religion, wrote numerous magazine articles and gained a reputation as an eloquent public speaker. He also translated and published the works of noted European philosophers, which resulted in warm friendships with some of the world’s leading thinkers.

After spending four years in Europe, Wight and his invalid wife (she suffered frequent epileptic seizures) returned to Untied States, where he published a 12-volume series of autobiographies of great men, followed by a dozen more books of collected great works of literature and history.

Then the Civil War broke out. Wight had been working with five publishing companies and four of them immediately went out of business. To secure additional income, Wight sat for formal examinations and was awarded a Doctor of Medicine degree in 1865. In a similar process, he was admitted to the practice of law a few years later.

His wife’s condition worsened, with symptoms of insanity becoming more and more manifest. Wight hired a caregiver who soon came to be regarded as part of the family. In a plan proposed by Wight’s own wife in one of her increasingly rare lucid moments, Wight obtained a divorce, married the nurse and both of them formally pledged to adopt and continue caring for the now-former spouse. This was a highly unconventional arrangement for the time, and it would be the cause of a great deal of nasty gossip in the ensuing years.

In 1867, Wight moved to Oconomowoc and built a thriving medical practice. However, his former wife’s condition reached a point where there was no choice but to place her in an asylum. Shortly after, Wight’s second wife died.

Grief-stricken, he moved to his brother’s home in Brooklyn, N.Y., to recuperate. But his thoughts kept returning to Wisconsin and he contributed a series of articles to the Milwaukee Sentinel on political reform that won a great deal of favorable attention. In 1875, Wight was appointed chief geologist and surgeon general for the State of Wisconsin. In 1878, he was named health commissioner for the City of Milwaukee.

On taking office, he found overwhelming problems everywhere, including adulterated food, butchers selling tainted meat, unsafe milk, polluted drinking water, annual deadly epidemics and sewers that poured fifth unchecked into the rivers. For example, Wight reported:

Sometimes, in a dry season, the sewage of Milwaukee nearly equals the quantity of water flowing in the rivers. At least 100 tons of human and animal excreta, to say nothing of other putrescible organic matters, are emptied into these sluggish streams every day. Their waters are dark with filth, and yet the question is asked whether they are unhealthy. If a thick solution of ordure is unhealthy, the Milwaukee and Menomonee rivers are certainly so.

Changes large and small were desperately needed, and Wight threw himself wholeheartedly into his work, recommending sweeping changes in how the city obtained drinking water and disposed of waste.

It seemed Wight was everywhere. He examined plans for the city’s new public hospital and found them woefully lacking. He meticulously inspected every public school building and discovered poor heating, lack of ventilation and, in some cases, unspeakably foul outhouses next to open classroom windows. In a report detailing the schools’ problems and the cost of correcting them, Wight concluded with this powerful argument to the mayor and city council:

It seems heartless to dwell upon the economic side of the great and important problem. Above all, and beyond all, are human suffering, constitutions broken for life, seeds of disease early sown, pain too deep for tears in the panting breast of many a little one, the heartache of parents, the shroud, the emblems of mourning, the solemn dust to dust and ashes to ashes closing blighted careers which sanitary wisdom might have prolonged over the customary years of usefulness.

In another instance, Wight learned that undertakers were yielding to family requests and allowing open-coffin funerals for victims of contagious diseases. Wight issued a health department order reminding undertakers of the requirement that coffins of those who died of contagious disease remain sealed and vowing swift action against violators. As a result, Wight said:

A few people grumbled about tyranny in a free country, and one clergyman sent me word that I was interfering with Divine Providence. I sent him back word that if he would produce an authenticated order from Divine Providence that smallpox, scarlet fever, and diphtheria shall not be contagious at funerals, then the Commissioner of Health would consider his order superseded.

Wight and his assistants at the Heath Department believed that every complaint deserved a fair hearing and instituted an informal nuisance court. In its first eight months, the health department considered more than 1,200 cases. Wight described the range of concerns heard by the department:

A merchant complains that the odor of a hog pen reaches his new mansion. A pauper brings a piece of tainted meat, supplied by the contractor for furnishing provisions to the poor, and asks for the protection of the proper officer. One is distressed with the sickening smell of a neighboring soap factory. Another brings wormy flour purchased at a grocery. Mrs. Pickle comes to scold about Mrs. Fidget who lets her hens run at large in the back yards of neighbors. Dr. Teufelsdrock demands that the Commissioner shall suppress a certain blacksmith who has the impudence to practice medicine. A gentleman has discovered a dead hen in the street and lectures the Department for permitting such things. A meek man seeks redress against a neighbor whose foul privy vault stains through a thick wall into the very room where he sleeps in the basement of his house. A widow sobs while she narrates that her landlord lets stagnant water stand two feet deep in the cellar of the house where she lives. A laborer brings a cup of milk, alive with bacteria, from the dairy of Herr Gotlos, who keeps his cows shut up in an unventilated stable and feeds them with nothing but "still-slops;" and wants to know if that is what makes his children sick. A Grand Avenue "nob," whose nose is still turned up in memory of odoriferous vapors, demands that the Commissioner of Health shall instantly suppress several great packinghouses in which half a million of money is invested. And so on, to the end of a long chapter.

Just as suddenly as Wight appeared on the scene he was gone. In 1881, he accepted appointment as health officer for the City of Detroit.

While his work had been well received in Milwaukee, it was a different story in Detroit where officials were reluctant to give his office any real power, and even medical men argued against his recommendations. Wight persevered for a time – he is credited with spearheading the reconstruction of Detroit’s sewer system – but finally decided it was impossible to continue in office. He resigned and set off on a voyage across the Pacific. During the journey, Wight contracted a tropical fever, which left him greatly weakened. Returning to Detroit, he wrote and published a book of his lifetime travels entitled, "A Winding Journey Around the World."

Although exhausted by his long illness and by the strain of writing this book, Wight paid a visit to Milwaukee where his large circle of friends welcomed him enthusiastically and where he sold numerous copies of his new book. "This," his brother later wrote, "brought excitement when rest was needed; the fever burned anew."

In October 1888, Wight returned to Detroit and was admitted to a hospital. His condition worsened and word was sent to his brother to come immediately. Arriving at the hospital, Wight’s brother wrote, "He told me by signs that he did not desire to get well, that his life had been all labor, and that he wished to go. And so I laid his head upon the pillow, and he seemed to be satisfied."

Wight was 64 at the time of his death. There are no statues of Wight or parks named for him in Milwaukee. He is almost entirely forgotten.

Carl Swanson Special to OnMilwaukee.com
Carl Swanson is a magazine editor and also blogs about his adopted hometown of Milwaukee. He has worked in the publishing industry for more than 25 years. He lives in Milwaukee's Riverwest neighborhood with his wife, three children and two cats.