“Council Should Act on 700 Citizens’
Request for Mask Ordinance.” “Individual Quarantine Should be Made Permanent in
Fighting Influenza.” “New Flu Law Enacted for Quarantine Emergency: Guards to
be placed if ordinance is disregarded.” “Deaths by Influenza Top War
Casualties.”
Such were the headlines in the Los Angeles Herald from the fall of 1918
to the spring of 1919. There were many
similarities to the Coronavirus (COVID-19) we are now experiencing. Read for
yourself what was happening during the epidemic that struck the world more than
a 100 years ago and make your own comparisons with what is transpiring today.
In the fall of 1918 a deadly disease
began to sweep across the United States--influenza. In October, the epidemic
reached Long Beach. Years later it was
determined that it probably started on a pig farm in Iowa. After the annual Iowa Cedar Rapids Swine Show
in September 1917, a mysterious ailment gripped its pigs. Millions of hogs fell ill and thousands
died. At the same time the pigs got
sick, Canadian hunters found moose and elk with flu. The pig virus also hit bison and sheep and
eventually humans. Doctors didn't
recognize the epidemic potential until American troops had already introduced
the flu to war-weary Europe. Coughing
Germans called it the "Blitz Kartarrh" while feverish English solders
named it "Flanders Grippe." American troops added to the confusion by
calling it the "Spanish Flu" or "Spanish Lady."
In September 1918 the flu
overwhelmed Camp Devens outside of Boston.
The overcrowded military camp housed 45,000 men where only 35,000 were
intended. The first case appeared on the
first of September and by the eighteenth had multiplied to 6,674 cases. Many of the soldiers, men in the prime of
health, turned blue, bled from the nose and died in forty-eight hours,
struggling for air. In the book the Fourth Horseman by Andrew Nikiforuk, one
physician called it the most vicious type of pneumonia he had ever seen, and
reported that "mahogany spots" spread over the face "until it
was hard to distinguish the colored man from the white." In one day 90 men
died.
Having had no previous experience
with the 1918 swine flu strain, the adult immune system overreacted. All of the inflammation and water in the body
allowed wandering bacteria to deliver lung dissolving infections. Crowded barracks, fetid trenches and sealed
troop ships guaranteed that there was no shortage of meningitis of
staphylococci to stalk soldiers. By the
end of October, one in five U.S. servicemen had the flu.
The Southern California epidemic
started with the arrival of an infected ship in the San Pedro harbor. On October 11th, following the lead of Los
Angeles County health officials, Long Beach city commissioners ordered all
schools, churches, theaters, dance halls, bath houses and fraternal lodge
houses closed. Public meetings were
forbidden.
Other ways were tried to stop the
spread of the virus. One small town in
Arizona made it a criminal offense to shake hands. Every morning the army forced its recruits to
gargle with salt and water, the men then drilled twenty yards apart. In many places, people seized upon the
imagined flu-fighting properties of vegetables; some tied cucumbers to their
ankles while others put a potato in each pocket. One Oregon mother even buried her
four-year-old daughter neck-high in onions.
The more scientific-minded added sulfur to the soles of their shoes.
Perhaps the most popular protection against the flu was a white cotton mask. In San Francisco, public health officials started a cotton craze by passing an ordinance that forbid people from appearing in public places without a mask over their nose and mouth. The only place people didn't have to wear masks was at home or in a restaurant while eating. At the beginning of the epidemic, the mask had such appeal that even frightened newlyweds wore gauze when they made love.
Despite all the precautions the
influenza spread. In the first two weeks
of October between 400 and 500 cases of influenza had been reported in Long
Beach and five deaths had occurred.
The disease itself resembled a very
contagious kind of cold. It was accompanied
by a fever, pains in the head, eyes, ears, back or other parts of the body. In
most cases the symptoms disappeared after three or four days; some patients,
however, developed pneumonia or meningitis and died. Nurses and others were warned to guard against
breathing in the germs by wearing a fold of gauze or mask while near a
patient. Some, such as Doctor William J.
Cook, physician at Seaside Hospital, caught the disease despite taking all the
necessary precautions. Doctor Cook died
of influenza on October 26, 1918.
Tragic stories were everyday reading
in the obituary section of the local newspapers. On October 16, 1918, death
invaded the Harry Poor home for the second time in two weeks. First Poor, a mining engineer, passed away
from influenza. Two weeks later his son
Allen, aged 3 was buried at Sunnyside Cemetery.
Twenty-year-old Pearl Phillips pleaded that her husband George not be
buried until she recovered from the flu.
Instead she joined her husband in the same grave when she died a few weeks
later – both victims of influenza.
Second Lieutenant Edward Stout survived the war, only to become a victim
of the flu. One month after his arrival
home, his death notice appeared in the February 2, 1919, Daily Telegram. His son had
just been born five days earlier.
On November 23, 1918, the ban on
public gatherings in Long Beach was lifted.
On December 9th, schools reopened.
However, a second influenza epidemic hit the City in January 1919. Schools, theaters and other places where the
public gathered were again closed for ten days, but not before Detective E. V.
Denney of the Long Beach police force had a curse put on him.
Denney was in the process of
arresting a young Gypsy fortune teller who was plying her trade on the Pike
without a license when she told him he was under “a spell of death.” According to the comely fortune teller Denney
would soon be attacked by influenza.
Only by wearing a coffee strainer over his face, and thereby appearing
ridiculous, could death be avoided.
Denney didn’t believe a word of it!
2437 Long Beach men and women had
gone to war; 50 of them did not return.
In comparison, 9000 cases of influenza were reported in Long Beach
between October 1, 1918 and February 1, 1919; 148 Long Beach residents died.
The flu buried more than 50
million people throughout the world in eighteen months. The death rate stunned physicians. It took the battlefields of France four
years to kill 15 million men but the flu did the same work in much less
time. In the United
States alone more people died of the flu (550,000 adults)
in 1918 than the U.S.
military lost to combat in both World Wars, Korea
and Vietnam . In Alaska ,
whole Indian villages disappeared while India lost more than 12 million
people. Adults with flu finished a poker
game or army drill one minute, only to drop dead the next. Although the epidemic initiated the biggest
plague die-off in world history, it is remembered, when it is remembered at
all, as no more than a bad outbreak of "the flu."
Thank you,Claudine, for an excellent thumbnail sketch of life...and death,a century ago. Always so important to understand our history and culture.
ReplyDeleteThanks--good work!
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