Cryonic preservation: 50 years later

A professor at the University of California and a World War I veteran, Dr. James Hiram Bedford was a multi-talented man who led a happy life and saw the world. However, this man will be most remembered for being the first to have their body cryopreserved. It is the process of keeping a deceased person’s body (or brain) at extremely low temperatures.

In 1967, when medical technology was less developed than it is now, Bedford, a fairly affluent man, was diagnosed with kidney cancer that had spread to his lungs.

Bedford was aware of the idea of cryonic preservation at the time of his diagnosis.
He read about it in Dr. Robert Ettinger’s book The Prospect of Immortality.

Known as the father of body freezing experiments, Dr. Ettiger founded the Cryonics Institute. In order to possibly revive it in the future, when medical technology has progressed to the point where it can cure the condition that led to the person’s death, his institute offers body freezing services after death.

After reading about this procedure, Bedfrod requested that his body be frozen.

After all of his blood was removed from his body, he received an injection of dimethyl sulfoxide in the afternoon of January 12, 1967, to protect his internal organs.

Bedford was then submerged in a liquid nitrogen tank that was 196 degrees Celsius below zero.
Twenty-four years later, Bedford’s body was opened and his cryogenic condition examined by Alcor, a company that performs cryonic preservation.

The body was found to have been well preserved. His face appeared younger than his 73 years, and his mouth and nose smelled like blood. His corneas were the chalky white of ice, and patches of skin on his neck and chest were discolored.

After that, Bedford was placed in a fresh sleeping bag and left to wait in liquid nitrogen.

He is still only a “mummy” today, more than 50 years after the time was supposed to be reached to wake Bredford.

Bredford’s final words were, “I want you to understand that I did not do this with the thought that I would be revived,” according to Robert Nelson, one of the three scientists who carried out the cryonic preservation. I took this action in the hopes that my descendants would eventually profit from this fantastic scientific discovery.

Related Posts

The Culinary Feud That Saved My Mother-In-Law

I moved to my husband’s country just weeks after our wedding, believing we were beginning a gentle new chapter together. Instead, I found myself navigating foreign soil,…

Working at a Hotel Showed Me How the Smallest Amenities Become Lifelines for People in Need and How Simple Acts of Quiet Care Behind the Scenes Can Transform Ordinary Shampoo Bottles Into Unexpected Symbols of Compassion, Dignity, and Human Connection

When I first stepped into the world of hotel work, I assumed hospitality was mostly about precision—smooth check-ins, crisp sheets, and the kind of polite, rehearsed warmth…

What Happens When a Woman Goes Without Inti.macy for a Long Time — Emotionally, Physically, and Mentally

There are seasons in a woman’s life when she pours every part of herself into survival, ambition, family, or healing. Days stack quietly into years, and without…

My Neighbor’s Cooking Is a Disaster – but One Comment from Her Husband Turned My World Upside Down

After my divorce and job loss, I rented a quiet cabin hoping to disappear for a while. My elderly neighbor brought me disasters disguised as home-cooked meals….

I Paid for an Elderly Woman’s Groceries—Two Days Later, My Entire Life Took a Turn I Never Expected

The Apple Pie That Changed Everything I never expected a simple act of kindness to change my life.When I reached out to help a stranger at the…

Everything was captured in camera

Between Stations: A Flight for Freedom and a System Under Strain A routine train journey between Bristol and London became a nightmare in minutes. A 16-year-old girl,…