Matthews was born in Killiney, near Dublin, Ireland in 1843[2] to Nicolas Blayney Matthews and Anna Burke Matthews. His mother having died a few years after his birth, his father took him and his brother to the United States. He grew up in Wisconsin and Iowa, and his father, a medical doctor, began training his son in medicine. He would go on to graduate from the University of Iowa in 1864 with a degree in medicine.[3]
There is some evidence that Matthews married a Hidatsa woman during this time. Her name is not known.[6] There is also speculation and circumstantial evidence that Matthews had a son with the woman.[7][8]
In April, 1876, Matthews was sent to Camp Independence to serve as Post Surgeon. In ensuing months he serviced soldiers and local civilians; he vaccinated hundreds of Native Americans of the Owens Valley against smallpox. During his stay in the Owens Valley he pursued other interests, such as collecting native plants. He sent his collection to Asa Gray, who named two of those new to science after him: Loeseliastrum matthewsii and Galium matthewsii. Camp Independence was closed in July, 1877.[9]
In 1887, Matthews published The Mountain Chant: A Navajo Ceremony which has been described as "probably the first full account of a Native American ceremony ever published".[12] He was also said to have been initiated into various secret Navajo rituals.[13] He also used wax cylinders to record ceremonial prayers and songs.[14]
Matthews also published a number of other books on his research amongst the Navajo, including Navaho Legends (1897) and Navaho Myths, Prayers and Songs (1907).
In his work he reported that the Navajo were ichthyphobic, having a taboo on eating fish. He theorized that "Living in a desert land where water is so scarce and so obviously important to life, [coming to regard] water as sacred, it is an easy step for them to regard as sacred everything that belongs to the water…. Hence it becomes a sacrilege to kill the fish or eat its flesh."[15]
Matthews work on the Navajo served to dispel then-current erroneous thinking about the complexity of Navajo culture. In an account of Matthews's Presidential Address to the American Folklore Society in 1895 ("which was titled "The Poetry and Music of the Navahoes"), The Critic magazine wrote:
Dr Matthews referred to Dr Leatherman's account of the Navahoes as the one long accepted as authoritative. In it that writer has declared that they have no traditions nor poetry, and that their songs "were but a succession of grunts".[16] Dr. Matthews discovered that they had a multitude of legends, so numerous that he never hoped to collect them all: an elaborate religion, with symbolism and allegory, which might vie with that of the Greeks; numerous and formulated prayers and songs, not only multitudinous, but relating to all subjects, and composed for every circumstance of life. The songs are as full of poetic images and figures of speech as occur in English, and are handed down from father to son, from generation to generation.[17]
Matthews has been credited for treating "Navajo medicine men as colleagues" and seeing his informants as individuals rather than "just sources of data".[12] However, he has been criticised for the then common practice of not crediting his informants in his published works.[18] However, his research has been credited with creating through "careful and thorough fieldwork ... a monumental bequest for future generations of the Navajo people and scholars".[19]
^Wood, W. Raymond; Karl Bodmer; Joseph C. Porter; David C. Hunt (2002). Karl Bodmer's studio art: the Newberry Library Bodmer collection. Champaign, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. p. 81. ISBN978-0-252-02756-7.
^Link, Margaret Schevill (October–December 1960). "From the Desk of Washington Matthews". The Journal of American Folklore. 73 (290). American Folklore Society: 317–325. doi:10.2307/538492. JSTOR538492.
^Catalogue of Oberlin College for the Year 1890-1891. Oberlin, Ohio: The Oberlin News Free Press. 1890. p. 80. Retrieved June 9, 2009. Link mentions that she found photos of Berthold Matthews at Oberlin in Matthews' belongings, and a Berthold Matthews from Yankton, South Dakota is listed in the 1890 catalog at Oberlin. Presumably Matthews named him after the Fort where he was born.
^Powell, J.W. (1888). "Work of Doctor Washington Matthews". Sixth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Director of the Smithsonian 1884–85. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office: XXXVIII–XL.
^Matthews, Washington (1898). "Ichthyphobia". The Journal of American Folk-Lore. 11 (41). Published for the American Folk-lore Society by Houghton Mifflin: 105–112. doi:10.2307/533215. JSTOR533215.