The Influenza Epidemic of 1918 reached the Delta of Mississippi in the first week of October. In Warren County, Mississippi, death registers listed many individuals who fought for their lives, not in the Great War, but in crowded apartments, over-filled hospitals and one-room houses in the Mississippi Delta. Arthur Neal, Katie Alice Williams and Mary Elizabeth Guider died between November 9, 1918 and November 10, 1918, later victims of the disease. These Warren County, Mississippi residents all shared the primary cause of death, Influenza. Warren County experienced many deaths listing the primary cause of death as Influenza. The Warren County Death Register also listed secondary causes of death such as typhoid fever, bronchitis and pneumonia. This essay will reveal the how the virus impacted and changed the people of three Delta communities: Vicksburg in Warren County, Greenville in Washington County and Clarksdale in Coahoma county.[1]
Mississippi’s war at home against the Influenza epidemic began in the latter parts of September; however, it wasn’t until October when the total number of influenza deaths began to surge across the state. Historical records were not kept by county to show the number of deaths by the Influenza virus in 1918, according to the representatives of Mississippi’s State Department of Archives and History. Therefore, this essay will use state Influenza statistics and county death rates to infer death by influenza in 1918 in selected Delta counties. By examining the number of Influenza deaths in the state in January of 1918, reports indicated that there were 46 white cases and 52 Negro cases. However, by October of 1918, that number increased to 1,057 white cases and 1,873 Negro cases in the state. Furthermore, by the following month, in November, there were only 458 cases white cases reported, a considerable drop in the number of cases compared to the 1,507 Negro cases reported in the state. The Influenza virus had a greater impact and longer duration for the Negro population in the State of Mississippi.
The total
deaths due to influenza for the year 1918 were remarkable because for the first
time in history the disease made such drastic mortality rates. The total number of deaths was 6, 219
representing a total death rate of 310.6 per 100,000 population for the year
1918. For the previous year of 1917,
only 442 deaths occurred, making a total death rate of 32.4 for the state in
1917. Among the white population for the
year 1918, 1,985 deaths occurred, compared to 201 deaths among the white race
for the year 1917, which represents a total white death rate of 226.7 and 23.2
respectively for the biennial period. The Negroes suffered a much larger death
rate, the total for the year 1918 being 4,234 and for the year 1917, 241
deaths. These totals reduced to rates
are 376.0 and 21.7 per 100,000 for the years mentioned. During the year 1913, 293 deaths are charged
to Influenza and 182 deaths for the year 1914.
The total rates due to this disease per 100,000 population for this
period (1913-1914) are 15.6 and 9.6 in the order mentioned. It will be seen, therefore, that Influenza
had not been classed as a very disastrous disease until the year 1918, when all
previous records were broken. Also, the
deaths from Influenza occurred largely during the latter four months of
1918. Up until the Epidemic of 1918, the
number of deaths to Influenza was relatively small in comparison to the number
of deaths that were recorded in 1918; therefore, Influenza was disastrous in
the manner of how it overtook the population of Mississippi so quickly.[2]
Josephine Bishop Tibbs, a former-care giver in
Jackson, Mississippi recalled how the disease took hold of her in 1918, as
statistics showed it being the highest cause of death for that year:
and I went home sick with the flu and I remember my mother praying; and she had some Solorn liniment
in the house and she gave me a few drops of Solorn liniment on some sugar. And you know, that broke that
flu upon me. I’m here to tell the tale.
As the disease took hold of the counties in and
around the Delta, the Tibbs interview showed a rare glimpse of local treatment
for the Influenza Pandemic of 1918:
Solorn liniment is good...I hope the Solorn liniment people hear that
I remember it looked like people were dying every which-a-way with the flu.
So I thought I was very fortunate.
It should be noted that in Warren County, the death rate per 1,000 persons was higher than that of the state of Mississippi’s average, which was 15.2 percent computed on 30,437 deaths in 1918 and 11.9 percent computed on 23,579 in 1917. Also, when broken down by race, white and Negro death rate statistics of 1918 and 1917 for Warren County both illustrated the same increase in death rates compared to the state averages. The total white death rate for the year 1918 for the state, of 11.6, stands out therefore conspicuously as the highest death rate among the white population of any single year in the history of statistical records in the state because of the increase mortality from pneumonia and influenza. The total Negro death rate for the year 1918 for the state of 18.0 represents a much higher death rate among Negroes than occurred for any previous years. No doubt the increased number of deaths due to influenza and pneumonia had something to do with this increase in Negro mortality.
An interesting correlation between the rise of Influenza deaths among white and Negro cases was the rise in pneumonia deaths for the month of October 1918 across the state. The number of white cases with pneumonia was 158 and the number of Negro cases was 309. [5] Arthur Neil, Katie Alice Williams and Mary Elizabeth all of Warren County, incidentally, had pneumonia as one of their secondary causes of death. Historical death records did not show if that was a complication due to the Influenza virus or a misdiagnosis of death. [6]
The Vicksburg Evening Post was the major newspaper publication in Warren County, Mississippi at the time of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918. Beginning in October, the newspaper’s coverage of the virus was scarce. Most articles appeared in the second section on the last page of the paper. Any articles that surfaced closer to page one regarding the virus and epidemic were solely documenting what was happening in the larger Northern cities. Although Influenza cases were few in the Delta city of Vicksburg, the Evening Post kept an observant eye on the number of cases developing in the larger northern cities, especially Boston and Chicago. As the Friday, October 4, 1918 Post printed on its pages: “Spanish Influenza still unconquered in Chicago Districts” or “Whole Families Die in Boston,” kept Southern health workers and citizens abreast to the developments of this strange malady making its way toward the south. Boston, Massachusetts reported that this “medieval plague” threatens to overwhelm the whole country.[7]
The Vicksburg Evening Post treated the Influenza threat with many precautionary measures and tried not to garner possible panic. The precautions that were taken for university students prevailed first. Delta students that were in larger cities started to return home. Vicksburg students that were ill due to the malady, as it was referred too, remained at the Industrial Institute and College at Columbus, Mississippi. The authorities that closed the institution were very optimistic that the prevailing influenza would not render their college closed for more than a few weeks and the pro-active measures taken to send Vicksburg students home were the wise course of action to prevent further cases.[8] The Industrial Institute and College experienced a total of 147 Influenza cases, nine of whom developed pneumonia. There were no deaths reported at I.C.C. However, the institution was ill-equipped to handle the disease and converted the Industrial College into a hospital and asked for assistance from Camp Shelby. Camp Shelby supplied the institution with two doctors, two nurses and four orderlies for service. After exhausting all applications for assistance, the institution called upon volunteer help—many of whom where girls from the Normal College. This essay will further detail the manner in which Delta communities handled the Influenza disease at the A& M College in Starkville.[9]
By the following week, the Vicksburg Evening Post had a front page article that reported
“Several Cases of Flu in Vicksburg; Churches, School, Movies Closed.” The medical community in 1918 presented a
very compelling argument that Vicksburg should not make the mistakes of their
neighboring cities by allowing a tremendous number of cases to develop and then
try to lock the stable door after the horse has been stolen, reported Dr. G.Y.
Hicks county health officer to the Vicksburg commissioners.
By sending out precautionary recommendations, the
commissioners and local health officers hoped to reduce the rapid spread of
Influenza in Vicksburg. When a few cases of the virus had been reported in
widely scattered parts of the city, it was brought to the attention of the
county health officers who advocated action, which local government leaders
responded to at once. The county health
officer stated plainly to the city leaders that their recommendations were
presented solely in the interest of public health, as a precaution, and not on
account of the few cases in Vicksburg. Dr. Hicks noted in the Vicksburg
Evening Post on October 7, 1918:
I want to go on record as advocating the closing of every public gathering place now and at once as a precautionary measure. Not because of the number of cases here now, for there only a few, which developed in the last few days, but because of the number of cases that we are certainly going to have unless some action is taken.Dr. Alverson, the city physician in Vicksburg at the time of the Influenza Epidemic in 1918, concurred with the county health officer’s recommendations and suggested that all hotels and pool rooms (public gathering places) have their floors washed with a disinfecting solution and the spittoons flooded with a disinfectant kept constantly in them, to end the spread of germs. Every measure that the city of Vicksburg could take would prevent the spread and would lessen the number of severe cases at any one time. Those measures, Dr. Alverson pointed out, would also prevent the development of many serious cases too.
As of Wednesday, October 9, 1918, there was no marked spread of the disease in the Vicksburg and Warren County areas. Dr. Hicks, the County Health Officer, felt the ready acceptance of the “close down orders” had greatly helped the situation and reduced the chances of the virus spreading across the city and county. Dr. Hicks made a comment that the slowness of the development of the virus would make the presence of influenza somewhat longer in the city; however, the city had an advantage if it were spread out over a longer period of time because the situation could thus be more readily handled by the local physicians and health authorities. Also, the presence would tend to lessen the development of large numbers of extremely severe cases with complications, which nearly always follow the rapid development of an epidemic due to crowded public places.[14] The Influenza virus in the city of Vicksburg had developed at a very slow pace which was exactly what the authorities wanted. The fewer cases the city had at any one time gave them the ability to handle them more easily and effectively. The physicians were reporting regularly to city clerk, daily and from October 9 to October 10, 1918, the city had only twenty new cases of the Influenza virus.[15]
However, Dr. Dicks, the county physician and representative of the State Board of Health, reported that there had been but 59 new cases between October10 and October11, 1918 in the 24 hour period. That made 123 cases for the whole city since the first case was diagnosed. That was considered remarkable and furnished a valuable report on the excellent measures that were enacted by the authorities early on during this malady. It was believed that if such measures were not taken, there would have been many hundreds of cases here and some of them extremely severe. It should be noted that the number of physicians reporting to the city clerk increased because communication of the State Board of Health’s orders to report new cases every 24 hours became more apparent.
Gradually as the number of physicians who reported
to the city clerk increased, the number of Influenza cases increased. By October 12, 1918, there was a slight
increase in the number of new cases of Influenza in the last 24 hour period,
which was no more than expected. Once
again, the low number of new cases reported was attributed to the rigid orders
issued by the health authorities early on and the hearty cooperation of the
citizens of the city and county. The
situation looked encouraging to the local health authorities as the number of
new cases was not excessive.[16] However, none of the churches would reopen,
although it was rumored that the Catholic Church intended to celebrate Mass on
the campus of St. Xavier’s convent. Father Prendergast requested the Post to state that this was false, and
there would not be any public celebration of Mass in Vicksburg.[17] The subject came up as to when the schools
should be opened and the local government decided not to consider the opening
of the schools at the time of this editions printing. Yet, the local government leaders felt they
would be able to make a more definitive announcement for school opening by the
middle of the coming week.[18]
Although there had been no deaths in the community
following the Influenza outbreak, individuals
who died on Mississippi’s Delta soil were to have different funeral
arrangements. The Vicksburg Evening Post printed the order issued by the State Board
of Health and sanctioned by local authorities.
According to the orders issued, all funeral services held in the city of
Vicksburg were to be private in character and none of the bodies would be taken
to any churches since all public meeting places were closed.[19] However, in a matter of time there were to be
a number of deaths in Vicksburg. Within
a week of the orders by the State, three deaths were blamed due to
complications of the virus. In addition,
eighty new cases were reported.
In light of the rise in Influenza cases, there was
no relaxation of the measures taken to protect the citizens of Vicksburg and
Warren County. The local government and
medical authorities generally agreed there should be a tightening of all
precautionary orders. Both parties felt
that it would have been a grave mistake to lessen in any manner the measures
that had already been taken to keep the number of cases in this territory at a
minimum. In addition to the measures
passed by the local government, the members agreed to add a few new
precautionary orders. Among them was the
closing of all pool rooms in the city, which would do away with the possibility
of crowds gathering around tables, to either watch or play. Some mention was made of the fact that an
apparent distinction had been made between certain places where a crowd might
gather and others, so the local government decided to shut the pool rooms. Also, the local government issued an order
for all stores to be close at 6pm daily, except on Saturdays, when they could
remain open until 9pm. This had a double purpose; it would prevent citizens
from exposing themselves unnecessarily on the streets after dark and also serve
as a conservation measure to reduce the amount of fuel that was used. Both new orders by the local government were
accepted by the proprietors of the businesses affected.
As the wave of closings continued, there were inquiries regarding the holding of lodge meetings. The local government authorities indicated that the fraternal organizations and societies, secret or otherwise, came under the same regulation as the churches and schools, which meant no meetings were to be held for the present.
As a measure of preparedness and not from any immediate need, the State Board of Health, under the cooperation of local medical authorities, had the high school building fumigated and disinfected. This measure was taken in case an emergency arose where the number of hospital rooms were needed for a greater number of cases than the Vicksburg institutions could handle. Mr. Golden, the custodian, completed the orders issued and stated that there were three large rooms, the rest hall, the drawing room and the domestic art room that could all be equipped with cots at a moment’s notice if measures needed to be taken. The kitchen was also in perfect readiness for the preparation of sick dietaries. Dr. Hicks, county health officer, requested a general wearing of Influenza masks, which served as a very useful purpose in the prevention of contracting Influenza germs. When Dr. Hicks commented on the masks, he praised a small number of boys who already set a very good example by wearing masks that were provided by the Red Cross.[20]
As preparations were made to contain the territory for the worst case scenarios by the Mayor and local government leaders, the city and county medical authorities, the Home Service of the Red Cross called for attendants to wait on families who were down with Influenza. They did not need to be nurses and they could be white or black.[21] Previous local city board meetings secured the services of a number of African American nurses. These nurses were not trained, but a number of them had some experience in nursing.[22] The African American nurse called upon by the Mayor did not infer a shortage crisis in the health care fields, but to assist the health officials when they were needed. People who came as attendants had the responsibilities of simple services for patients who had no nurse, such as giving them water, carrying them food, and waiting on them in any way. There were a number of women in Vicksburg who could do this service, persons who had no infection in their own homes. Women who preformed this kind of work were to be paid a liberal price of compensation and all attendants were furnished with masks and Red Cross aprons and given simple instructions in regards to treating the Influenza. It should be noted that the Red Cross made a special appeal to the African American women of this community who are able to perform this kind of service to enroll at once and help the citizens of Vicksburg who needed such assistance.[23]
By October 21, 1918, Dr. Hicks, the County Health Officer, was very encouraged with the influenza situation. The local board of health found that the disease was not spreading rapidly and that was one of the best features of the situation. The doctors reported their cases more accurately for the purpose of the daily record and in that manner tabulated statistics for a given 24 hours were more accurate. At the recommendation of the Mayor, under the encouraging reports from the health officials, he allowed at least one drug store to be open late for the purpose of filling prescriptions. Mr. Heckler, of the Block-Hazlip Company at Clay and Washington streets, stated that he would remain open every night until 1am and all night, at any time that the city leaders considered it necessary. In competition, The Bryan Drug Company, had a prescription clerk at their store every night until 11pm. It now seemed that there could be no further complaints about patients being compelled to wait several hours to have their prescriptions filled.[24]
By the end of the month of October, the city of Vicksburg in Warren County, Mississippi took several precautionary measures to prevent widespread disease. These measures and orders by local city, medical and State officials limited the number of cases and more importantly deaths across this territory. In the last week of October, the Influenza Epidemic was front page news. Despite what started out as stories about a “strange malady,” it became apparent that this “germ” was much more than previous thought. The citizens of Vicksburg and its surrounding county had a grand total of only 1,336 cases and 16 deaths caused by the Influenza virus. Although cases continued to surface well into 1919 in the Delta city of Vicksburg, fewer died of it as a primary cause. Influenza became part of the secondary listings as marked in death registers in Warren County, Mississippi.[25]
Greenville, in the Delta town just 82 miles north along the Mississippi River, experienced the Epidemic in larger numbers of cases and deaths. State death rate statistics will once again infer that the Influenza virus contributed to the rise of a death rate per 1,000 people. In the year 1918 in Washington County, Mississippi, the total death rate was 23.0 per 1,000 people. This rate was computed on a total of 30,437 deaths for the year 1918. The total death rate in 1918 showed a 10.8 percent increase from 12.2 percent in 1917, which was computed on a total of 23,579 deaths. The white death rate for Washington County in 1918 was 24.1 per 1,000, which was computed on a total of 10,177 deaths for the year. The white death rate illustrated an increase of 13 percent from 11.1 percent in 1917, which was computed on a total of 8,048 deaths. The Negro death rate for Washington County in 1918 was 22.9 per 1,000 people, which was computed on a total of 20,260 deaths for the year. The Negro death rate illustrated an increase of .9 percent from 27.4 percent in 1917 based on 15,531 deaths. In summation, the year 1918 experienced 1,128 deaths of which 176 were white and 952 were Negroes, compared to 1917, which experienced 595 deaths of which 81 were white and 514 were Negroes.Also, when Washington County was compared to urban areas in its county, defined by having a population of 2,500 or more at the time of the 1910 Federal Census was taken, death rates of Washington’s urban area showed a significant increase in the percent of deaths per 1,000 population. The city of Greenville’s total number of deaths in 1918 was 375 or 33.3 percent urban death rate per 1,000 population of which 111 were white and 257 were Negroes. The cities total number of deaths in 1917 were 237 or 21.4 percent urban death rate per 1,000 population of which 60 were white and 177 were black. As previously noted in the Warren county statistics comparing the State of Mississippi’s death rate per 1,000 people, broken down by race as well, between 1917 and 1918, Washington County statistics are all significantly higher than that of the state’s averages as well. I previously noted the State’s averages in the aforementioned text in Warren County.[26]
The Weekly Democrat-Times, and the Daily Democrat-Times were the city of Greenville’s newspaper publication at the time of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918. The initial coverage of the disease was not widespread and the readers of the Greenville papers had few direct quotes from their Mayor, city physicians and local health authorities regarding the course of action that was taken to prevent the widespread outbreak of Influenza. The Democrat-Times spent a considerable amount of time providing information about the origin, symptoms and possible treatment for the disease. As the disease took hold of this Delta community, the newspaper focused on community needs and how the disease impacted its citizens. Beginning on October 3, 1918, the Democrat-Times ran a story buried in the back of the paper about a “Spanish Flu.” The story was a summary from a bulletin from the Mississippi State Board of Health in regards to Spanish Influenza. The public was informed of the symptoms of the disease. In understanding symptoms, the reader needed to keep in mind that mild cases might occur and make it difficult to diagnosis accurately, but these mild cases will serve as a means of spreading the disease just as well as the more serious cases. For this reason any case of influenza was placed under the rule. In case of doubt in the diagnosis, the patient was isolated until the condition of the patient could be determined. It was imperative that the physicians of the state use their own opinion and judgment relative to handling such cases, rather than follow the advice and usual expressions of the laity.
The State Board of Health went on to tell the
readers of the Democrat-Times that
the seriousness of Influenza stemmed from the fatal complications such as
pneumonia and meningitis. Although
treatment was simple, because of the apparent danger of problems associated
with the disease, it was exceedingly important that proper care and treatment
be sought after promptly. The most
important treatment was rest in bed from the onset of the disease until all
symptoms were eradicated. The patient
was to be given fresh air and plenty of food.
As long as the patient had fever, the case was regarded as serious and
kept in bed. Since bronchopneumonia had
a tendency to occur, all patients were placed in well ventilated and warm
rooms. Quinine and aspirin were used successfully when secondary illness arose
in Influenza patients.[27]
Taking cues from the State Board of Health’s
issuance of the symptoms of Influenza and heeding the precautionary measures to
reduce the chance of being exposed the virus, the acting health officer Dr. A.
J. Ware declared the Spanish Influenza disease was now an epidemic in the city,
although no numbers were published in the local newspapers. The city board of health recommended to the
city council the seriousness of the conditions and recommended to the city
council that an ordinance be adopted at once that closed all places of public
gatherings: theaters, churches and all schools of the city. Students that were boarding in Greenville
were allowed to remain, but were quarantined while day pupils from the city were
not allowed to attend any schools.[28]
Parents of students from Greenville away at college at the time of the Epidemic
were reassured by Dr. W.S. Leathers, executive officer of the State Board of
Health in Jackson, Mississippi, that reports received from every college in the
state indicated everything for the betterment of conditions was being done at
the time and with the strict quarantine in effect, there was “no need for
alarm.”[29]
On Tuesday, October 8, 1918, a temporary closing
ordinance was adopted by the city council which passed a resolution stating the
Board of Health of Greenville declared that the disease called Influenza had
became an epidemic in the city and all places of public gathering were closed
during the epidemic. In the resolution,
all temporary closings would remain until the Board of Health in Greenville
declared the disease ended. The
ordinance stated that it was unlawful for any owner, manger, proprietor,
pastor, teacher, or other executive of any theater or church to assemble or to
attempt to cause to assemble, any crowd or aggregation of persons during the
aforementioned epidemic. Any person
violating any provision of this ordinance was to be guilty of a misdemeanor and
punished according to the city of Greenville ordinances.[30] The Democrat-Times
ran this closing ordinance in its entirety twice during the month of
October. The ordinance was also in
aggregate forms throughout sections of the newspaper as reminders about schools
and churches activities being cancelled or postponed. The U.S. Public Health Service also issued an
Official Health Bulletin on Influenza, which ran in the October 17, 1918
edition of the Daily Democrat-Times
. This Bulletin was a national
response to a request for definitive information regarding Spanish Influenza
and reinforced the warnings of the Greenville ordinances. The Surgeon General, Rupert Blue, of the US
Public Health Service was interviewed for the report.[31]
Greenville’s Democrat-Times
made a plea for nurses to aid the city of Starkville; later, the city of
Clarksdale made a similar request in their newspaper. At the onset of the
disease in early October, the A. & M. College was stricken by the disease
where six-hundred boys were ill and several deaths had occurred, which was
reported in the State News sections. In the Democrat-Times an urgent plea was sent for all graduate nurses and
nurses’ aides to assist in ending the Spanish-Influenza on campus. In the
aforementioned text, the city of Vicksburg only requested students be returned
from I.C.C. and no request was made for nurses to be sent, since the disease at
the time did not pose a serious threat.
Vicksburg did not send nurses to Starkville either. The Democrat-Times reported that salaries
were to be paid to nurses and expenses paid for nurses’ aides who were
accepted, regardless of race. The Red
Cross Influenza Committee also organized assistance for families in Greenville, when the disease
became more serious. The committee
requested nurses, aides and other volunteers for Greenville as the disease
progressed.[32]
Neighbors and church societies rendered great assistance in prepared meals for
the sick. Volunteer housekeepers and caretakers for children were needed to
relieve mothers who were in bed with the disease. Masks were furnished and were provided
without cost by applying for them.[33]
Within seven days of the Red Cross Influenza
Committee call for community assistance, the Democrat-Times published that in various sections of the city, diet
kitchens were set up and broth and other
nourishing foods were sent to influenza patients, daily. In comparison to the local Red Cross
committees of Vicksburg and Clarksdale, the Democrat-Times
reported a number of men volunteered to nurse the sick at night. It was
encouraged that more men volunteer at night to assist in tending to the nursing
needs of the ill. The Red Cross issued
that all African American volunteer nurses were to be paid for their services
which were in great demand among the sick.
The Red Cross Influenza Committee reminded the Democrat-Times readers that its purpose was to provide assistance
whenever called upon, but in order to fulfill its duty, the Committee relied
upon the volunteers of the community to supply the demand at critical times in
the city.[34] One of
the demands on the Red Cross was buttermilk.
The Committee requested gallons of buttermilk for the nourishment of
Influenza patients. The Red Cross went
through ten gallons on a daily basis during the Epidemic in Greenville. The Committee held empty jars on reserve to
fill when donations were made to them.[35]
By late October 1918, the influenza situation was
improving among the white citizens of Greenville. However, such was not the case amongst the African
American population. Great numbers of African
American families were badly afflicted.
In one family, ten cases were found which left not one well-member to
tend to the sick. There was still a
great need for bedding, fruits and other nourishing foods for sick patients.[36] In efforts to help reduce the illness from
spreading and assist in families that were already affected, the local African
America church leaders took steps to look after the suffering in their church
locality. An African American church
committee was appointed to oversee the reports of the local ministers.[37] A new
Emergency Hospital was also opened for the African American people with
Influenza. The house was large, well
ventilated and was intended to reach more promptly and properly care for African
American patients more attentively. This
new hospital was opened under the direction of the local Red Cross chapter.[38]
Aside from the city council’s ordinance on temporary
closings and the State Board of Health warning on symptoms, prevention and
treatment, as well as, the U.S. Public Health Service, the Democrat-Times newspaper did not have wide spread coverage from
city leaders and local health officials regarding their course of action,
physician documentation, and daily updates on number of cases or deaths.
Although the Democrat-Times did not
have such figures in the public record of their newspaper, it did not infer
that the city leaders or health authorities did not record the disease’s impact
in other publications, such as the State Board of Health reports by county,
though this author found no such records.
Many of the human-interest stories in the Democrat-Times centered around what was cancelled or postponed,
such as the Ringling Brothers Circus, which cancelled all dates in the South
because of the epidemic.[39] Also,
a notice from the Sanatorium was published which requested that no flowers were
allowed to be sent to the patients and no inquiries as to the conditions of
patients over the phone except by family members. The Sanatorium experienced serious
overcrowding. These two measures were
taken to reduce the interruptions and increase time spent tending to the sick.[40]
Even with the numerous warnings and cautionary
ordinances enacted by city leaders, under the guidance of the State Board of
Health and local health officers, the disease spread at an alarming rate. In Coahoma County, Mississippi, 74 miles
north of Washington County and 156 miles North of Warren County, the city of
Clarksdale made preparations for the Influenza virus in their community. State death rate statistics will once again
infer that the Influenza virus contributed to the rise of death rate per 1,000
populations. In the year 1918, in
Coahoma County, Mississippi, the total death rate was 23.7 percent per 1,000 people. This rate was computed on a total of 30,437
deaths for the year 1918. The total death
rate in 1918 showed a 2.0 percent increase from 21.7 percent in 1917, which was
computed on a total of 23,579 deaths.
The white death rate for Coahoma County in 1918 was 17.6 percent 1,000 people,
which was computed on a total of 10,177 deaths for the year. The white death rate illustrated an increase
of 1.2 percent from 16.4 percent in 1917, which was computed on a total of
8,048 deaths. The Negro death rate for
Coahoma County in 1918 was 24.4 percent per 1,000 people, which was computed on
a total of 20, 260 deaths for the year.
The Negro death rate illustrated an increase of 2.0 percent from 22.4
percent in 1917 based on 15,531 deaths.
In summation, the year 1918 experienced 966 deaths of which 80 were
white and 886 were Negroes, compared to 1917, which experienced 868 deaths of
which 73 were white and 795 were Negroes.
Also, when Coahoma County was compared to urban areas in its county (urban
area previously defined in Washington County Statistics), death rates in
Coahoma’s urban area showed an increase in the percent of deaths per 1,000 people. The city of Clarksdale total number of deaths
in 1918 was 152 or 25.3 percent urban death rate per 1,000 people, of white 28
were white and 124 were Negroes. The
city’s total number of deaths in 1917 were 142 or 24.6 percent urban death rate
per 1,000 people, of which 26 were white and 116 were Negroes. As previously noted in Warren County
statistics comparing the State of Mississippi’s death rate per 1,000, broken
down by race, between 1917 and 1918, Coahoma County statistics were all
significantly higher than that of the state’s averages as well. Earlier in this essay, the author noted the
State’s averages in Warren County.[41]
In Coahoma County, the Clarksdale Daily Register ’s headline on October 7,
1918 was “Schools Ordered Immediately Closed.”
The Register printed the
message from the Mayor, J.W. McNair which told the citizens of Clarksdale of
the impending threat of the Influenza virus sweeping across the country. He felt precautionary measures should be in
place before the virus took hold of their community. In his message, he was authorized by the US
Government, through the State Board of Health, to close all schools, theaters,
churches and other places of public gathering, effective immediately. The proactive placement of the Mayor’s
message on the front page of the Daily-Register
served to warn the citizens of Clarksdale and reinforced the city’s position to
keep the cases of Influenza at a minimum.
At the time of the Mayor’s message, Clarksdale, Mississippi had only a
few reported cases of the disease.[42]
Although the city of Clarksdale initially had few
reported cases, the newspaper kept the people of the city abreast to the
developments of the disease elsewhere around the country, especially the
South. In Atlanta, Georgia despite
drastic measures taken by local health officials, unofficial reports from a
score of larger cities in the South showed more than 50,000 cases reported
among the civilian population and hardly a single army camp had escaped. Soldiers
at Camp Gordon, Georgia ,where some 1400 cases had developed, were ordered to
sleep in the open. Army physicians
relied on fresh air as one of the surest preventive measures taken. The mild
weather, by October 1918, was still prevailing, made the disease less fatal
than in the East, and the death rate was comparatively less.[43]
In addition the preventive measures issued by the
State Board of Health, the county and city health boards took further steps to
combat the spread of Influenza, by asking every doctor in the county to report
immediately any cases of the disease.
The County Health Officer Dr. S.D. Robinson announced the situation was
treated very thoroughly and there was not any concern for the people to become
panicked. Dr. Robinson stated that thirty new cases of influenza were reported
in Clarksdale on October 7 for a total of 21 new cases in the county. The people of Clarksdale were aware that
every step was being taken to prevent the spread of this malady in their
community, as local health authorities reinforced the State Board’s message. As
the physicians reported cases to the county health board, the number of cases
started to increase. There were about
50-75 cases in Clarksdale and 100 cases in the county, as of October 8. As Dr. Robinson stated, there was no need for excitement because
reports by physicians were done as precautionary measure to stop the spread of
Influenza.[44]
Despite the local ordinances of no public gathering,
the Clarksdale Daily Register on October 7 printed on the front page above the
Mayor’s message that the Sousa Band would be in Clarksdale Wednesday, October 9th. Dr. Robinson stated in a notice to the public
that as long as the meeting was held in the open air, the band was permitted to
perform by the State Board of Health. Director of Publicity, Ed A. Dalton
announced that Liberty Loan headquarters in St. Louis advised him that as long
as the meeting planned for Coahoma County was held in the open air, the State
Board of Health would not interfere.
Sousa’s band was scheduled to appear in the city at 6:30 a.m. on
Wednesday October9th and remain until 2pm the same day. However, Marshal W.K. Herrin reported that in
an effort to prevent the spread of Influenza, there was not going to be a
parade that was previously scheduled to be held.[45]
John Philip Sousa, in Marching Along, wrote
that during the epidemic, he received orders from the Treasury Department to
visit cities on behalf of Liberty Loan.
However, before he and his band left for the tour, a quarantine was
imposed and all band members were to stay in the station, per the orders of the
medical director. He did not question the directive of the medical officer; no
one ever questioned the mandate of the medical officer. Sousa and his band remained in quarantine
until it was raised. The battalion
surgeon, Dr. A.H. Frankel, made
preparations before the troops left for the scheduled cities. He converted one rail car into a sick bay and
placed the hospital corps in charge.
Dobell’s Solution was on hand and
other medical stores to prevent the “flu” from taking hold on the band. Dr. Frankel was commended to the commandant
by Sousa for the tireless effort he ensued to keep the men healthy. Sousa remarked, “We left home with
three-hundred and fifty officers and men. We returned home with three-hundred
and fifty officers and men.” This was
credited to the battalion surgeon who began the tour as a junior lieutenant,
but returned home and was promoted to senior.[46]
Although the cities in the Delta all adhered to the
same State Board of Health order for public closures, the Daily Register was the first paper to note how the disease impacted
services into the city. The railroads
were hit hard by Influenza; agents, dispatchers and others were brought down by
the ravages of the disease. According to
reports from railroad lines, many dispatch agents and other railroad men were
stricken with Influenza in early October.
Many of the employees were ill with the disease, but no deaths have
ensued. Some of the employees were confined to their homes at various points,
but many of the employees were not seriously affected. It was noted that hopefully the disease
would run its course and leave the area.[47]
The Daily-Register
reported on the malady around the state; in comparison with the city and
county, the numbers of deaths and reported cases were quite less. The scarcity of physicians and trained nurses
was one of the major complications of the epidemic. However, Dr. W.S. Leathers, executive officer
of the State Board of Health in Jackson, believed the rigid quarantine in force
at the time would break the back of the Epidemic in a comparatively short time
and lessen the demand placed on existing health professionals. All measures were to stay in force until he
was certain it was safe to remove any restrictions. Pneumonia followed influenza in a number of
cases reported to the State Board of Health.
This pattern had caused some concern among health experts. The concern for the disease did not wane,
however, and all precautionary measures were still in place, while the
officials of the Mississippi State Fair still organized events for the exposition. Also, exhibits arrived daily and when the
Fair opened, it was predicted that attendance records would be broken. Officials were hopeful the influenza epidemic
would subside before October 21.[48]
According to Dr. S.D. Robinson, county health
officer, the Influenza situation in Coahoma County was very mild, and the
doctor stated that conditions were not alarming, but that on the contrary the
physicians had the epidemic under control.
There were more than 66 new cases reported after Tuesday October8 by 13
physicians within the county and there were more than 74 cases on Wednesday October9
reported by 18 physicians. Dr. Robinson
stated that the epidemic in Clarksdale appeared to be under control and if the
current progress continued, he did not foresee any alarming consequences. Dr. Robinson believed anyone who became
infected and reported to their physician promptly would not suffer any
hardships as a result of coming in contact with this disease.[49]
During the Epidemic, local physicians in Delta
communities made daily reports to the city clerk, who in turn wired them to the
State Board of Health, who wired them to the Surgeon General of the Public
Health Service in Washington. However,
concern was noted by an unidentified state health official that “the method of
reporting morbidity and mortality in effect in Mississippi at this time was of
no immediate value in the collection of information of current
conditions.” The system used by the
State provided for the reporting of only mortalities from reportable diseases
before the end of a calendar month.
Morbidity was not reported. Also,
it was soon apparent that reports sent in by physicians were incomplete in many
cases and seldom more than sixty percent of the counties reported in any one
day. Dr. Leathers wired to the local
physicians that it was very important that the State Board of Health in Jackson
knew about the local conditions as accurately as possible. Since the medical profession had seen a
diminishing number among doctors and nurses because of the World War I, it was
imperative that every measure was taken to prevent the spread of this
disease. Dr. Leathers felt the
importance of gathering influenza data would help the Surgeon General act
“intelligently with reference to this matter.
The Influenza of 1918 had dramatic impacts on the
state of Mississippi and the localities of the Delta. The three aforementioned counties and cities
followed the orders from the State Board of Health administered by county
health officers, in order to minimize the impacts of the Epidemic in their
communities. It should be noted that
Warren County and Coahoma County had full-time health officers, which made a
difference in the manner the disease was handled in each county. Washington County’s health officer, Dr. Ware,
was only the acting health officer at the time of the Epidemic. This might infer that his ambition and
dedication to his position were not fully committed to Washington County’s
plight in 1918. As a result of the
Epidemic spreading across the country, beginning on October 1, 1918, the County
Health officers were requested to make monthly reports to the State Board of
Health. These reports included topics,
but not limited to, dealing with education, work and school related inspections,
vaccinations, and quarantines. For the
first time in the work of the State Board of Health, the new form of reporting
gave the County Health Officer an opportunity to indicate in a more detailed
way the activities the county had been engaged in doing health work. It was of interest that the County Health
Officers were very receptive in making these reports to the Board of
Health. During the months July, August
and September of 1918, every Health Officer in the state had made a monthly
report of county health work to the Board of Health even though it was not
required at the time. In addition to an
increase in reporting practices by the County Health Officer to the State
Board, the development of full-time Health Departments in the Delta was created
at a faster rate compared to the eastern counties of Mississippi. The organization of the county health
departments for Coahoma (October1, 1920), Washington (July 1, 1923) and Warren
(October 1, 1927) all marked a change of direction for the state. With the Delta Counties lead, the movement
toward full-time Health Departments was underway.[50]
During the formative or pioneer stage in
Mississippi, the State Board of Health underwent a series of movements fighting
specific diseases.[51] Intensive county health work in Mississippi
began on November 4, 1914 with Prentiss County for the relief and control of
soil pollution diseases, especially hookworm infection. In the early stages of
county health work in Mississippi, attention was concentrated almost entirely
upon hookworm disease and sanitation.[52] Following these social-health battles, the
State Board made the conclusion that in order to be more effective in waging a
fight against such diseases, it was imperative for a local agency to take over
the task and make it a more local concern.
A full-time county health department was the agency of preference.
County health departments were funded by subsidies from the State Board of
Health, the local appropriating bodies and federal and other agencies. Harrison County in Mississippi employed a
full-time health officer in 1917, but this was seen as an outcome from World
War I. The measures taken by that health
officer/agency were deemed successful and that county has maintained an agency
since its inception. The Harrison County
Health Department is the oldest existing full-time department in the State.
Making a full-time county health service a permanent
fixture in county government was not stressed upon prior to 1924. It was during the Influenza Epidemic that the
State Board of Health began to work more closely with the local health
officials. The State Board of Health realized a greater need in efficiency and
health practices; hence, health departments were organized on a permanent basis
with “adequate support and trained personnel as evidence was presented that
substantial results were found.” It
could be argued there was a cause and effect relationship in the creation of
the local health department and the Epidemic of 1918. From the work of Harrison County’s health
officer, the development of the full-time health agency had persistently grown.
In September of 1929, the American Journal of Public
Health recognized the county health department program in Mississippi. In an editorial that appeared, the
American Journal noted, “...the richer and more complacent northern
and eastern areas of the country have much to learn from their sister states
below the Mason and Dixon’s line...”
Since the state of Massachusetts was the first state in the Union to create
a public health department, the recognition given to the Southern States by the
American Journal was affirmation that although stereotyped by
their Northern brethren, southern states were able to achieve significant
progress in the area of public health after the Epidemic of 1918. By 1938, thirty counties, representing
fifty-three percent of the population and forty percent of the area of the
State, were serviced by a full-time local health service. [53] The scope of the work had broadened to
comprise practically all the major problems of preventive medicine. The modern county health unit of the state,
relative to the date of publication, included, but was not limited to, in its
program “the following activities: control of communicable diseases, prevention
of soil pollution and related diseases, and inspection of public utilities.”[54]
The Influenza Epidemic of 1918 lasted well into
1919, but statistics and newspaper coverage reported the disease’s impact was
primarily in the early part of October and lasted for 28 days in the three
Delta localities. The month of October
had the most devastating mortality rates in the year 1918. The Reports and articles illustrated
that both races experienced high mortality rates; however, the latter displayed
longer durations and higher mortality rates of the disease. The research did not uncover mortality rates
among social classes, income levels or gender due to Influenza. The physician
reports documenting the disease did not break down the demographics, but only
race. The Influenza case report that was sent to the State Board listed: “No.
of cases to date, No. of deaths to date, No. of new cases, No. of cases
discharged, No. of cases under treatment, No. of deaths, No. of cases
pneumonia, No. of pneumonia deaths and Physicians name and county.”[55] Treatment for patients of the disease varied
from each locality (from aspirin to buttermilk), but each community used
quarantining to try to prevent the spread of the disease.
Although detailed death records were incomplete, the
Epidemic brought about a greater need for cooperation between local, state and
federal health agencies as seen in the coordination between the U.S. Public
Health Service, the State Board of Health and the local county health
officials. Newspapers covered the recommendations of these agencies which
showed a unilateral commitment to eradicate the disease in the Delta. A greater trust and need for qualified local
health officers arose from the Epidemic and brought forth a permanent health
department in these and other Delta communities. Though devastating with the
surge in deaths in these communities, the forced changes in the health and
medical professions can be seen as a more positive advancement toward better
health for these Delta communities, as well as the state of Mississippi. The efforts of these agencies combined with
the climate of the South, the disease was not as deadly as higher populated
cities in the North. It was not until
the winter of 1928-1929 that Mississippi suffered another serious, though
milder onset of influenza, occurred. This time 4,093 deaths and 264,000 cases
were documented.[56]