|
|
Transcript
|
View Thumbnails
|
Add to Playlist
|
Embed/Link
|
Print
|
Dr. Alfred Crosby The source of your danger is your fellow human beings. The source of your danger is your wife, children and parents.
NARRATOR The pandemic that killed 13 million people.
Carla Morrissey They would put toe tags on before they were even dead.
Dr. Alfred Crosby It was out of a horror story.
Dr. Shirley Fannin If it happened once before, what's to say it's not going to happen again.
NARRATOR Influenza 1918 , on American Experience.
Influenza 1918 AMERICAN EXPERIENCE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE
American Experience is made possible by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation who enhance public understanding of the role of technology. The foundation also seeks to portray the lives of the men and women engaged in scientific and technological pursuit.
At Liberty Mutual Insurance, we do everything we can to help prevent accidents and make America a safer place. Liberty Mutual is proud to support American Experience.
At the Scotts Company, we help make gardens more beautiful, lawns greener, trees taller. If there's a better business to be in, please, let us know.
American Experience is also made possible by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
cpb A PRIVATE CORPORATION FUNDED BY THE AMERICAN PEOPLE CPB.ORG
And contributions to your PBS station from viewers like you. Thank you.
[sil.]
William Sardo People didn't wanna believe that they could be healthy in the morning and dead by nightfall. They didn't wanna believe that.
Linda Hunt It was the worse epidemic this country has ever known. It killed more Americans than all the wars this century combined.
Lee Reay It was a phantom, and we didn't know where it was.
William Maxwell In a gradual remorseless way, it kept moving closer and closer.
Daniel Tonkel But you never knew from day to day who was gonna be next on the death list.
Dr. Shirley Fannin There were so many people dying that you ran out of things that you'd never considered running out of before: caskets.
Linda Hunt Before it was over, it almost broke America apart.
Anna Milano I remember my mother putting a white sheet or white piece of cloth over his face and they closed the casket.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt In 1918 , the United States was a vigorous young nation, leading the world into the modern age. All our fears and anxieties were directed toward Europe where the war raged. At home, we were safe. William Maxwell was growing up in Lincoln, Illinois .
William Maxwell In 1918 , Lincoln was a town of 12,000 people. It was perhaps 50 years old, just time enough for the trees to mature so that their branches met over the sidewalks. Yards were large and children played in clusters in the summer evenings. On Sunday morning, the church bells were pretty to hear, but my father had had enough of church-going so we went fishing on Sunday, out in the country with a picnic. It was a life not very much impinged on by the outside world.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt In Macon, Georgia , Cathryn Guyler was five years old.
Cathryn Guyler My father was a playmate actually, and when he'd take me out in his car, he would stop at a grocery store that he knew and take me in and the owner of the store in his white uniform would say to his men, "Go out and shake the candy tree, boys!" I think I must have known that candy didn't grow on that tree, but I wouldn't have given up the notion because he was enjoying it and I was enjoying it, and everybody was enjoying it, you see.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt For a young newspaper woman in Denver , Katherine Anne Porter , life was like a romantic novel.
Katherine Anne Porter I had a job on the Rocky Mountain News. The city editor put me to covering theaters. I met a boy, an army lieutenant. We were much in love.
Linda Hunt The soldier was the darling of America . Patriotism ran unrestrained in a country newly entered in the Great War.
Anna Milani
Anna Milani We would march up the streets, singing "Tramp, tramp, tramp, the boys are marching. I spy Kaiser at the door, and we'll get a lemon pie, and we'll squash him in his eye, and there won't be any Kaiser anymore."
Cathryn Guyler It was a good world, but it was an age of innocence. We really didn't know what was ahead.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt Some say it began in the spring of 1918 , when soldiers at Fort Riley, Kansas burned tons of manure. A gale kicked up. A choking dust storm swept out over the land, a stinging, stinking yellow haze. The sun went dead black in Kansas . Two days later, on March 11th, 1918 , an army private reported to the camp hospital before breakfast. He had a fever, sore throat, headache, nothing serious. One minute later, another soldier showed up. By noon, the hospital had over a hundred cases; in a week, 500. That spring, 48 soldiers all in the prime of life died at Fort Riley . The cause of death was listed as pneumonia. This sickness then seemed to disappear, leaving as quickly as it had come. For over a century, the booming science of medicine had gone from one triumph to another. Researchers had developed vaccines for many diseases: smallpox, anthrax, rabies, diphtheria, meningitis.
Dr. Shirley Fannin EPIDEMIOLOGIST
Dr. Shirley Fannin With the great advances in microbiology, we were eliminating mysteries, okay? The mystery of what causes this disease. The mystery of what causes this disease. The optimism of being able to visualize something, all we have to do, we'll just look under the microscope and we'll see the organism and then take an action and see that something die off or be controlled. That leads to the thought of invincibility.
Linda Hunt It seemed that the masters of medicine could control life and death. There was nothing that Americans couldn't do. We could even win the war that no one could win. That summer and fall, over one and a half million Americans crossed the Atlantic for war. But some of those doughboys came from Kansas and they brought something with them, a tiny silent companion. Almost immediately, the Kansas sickness resurfaced in Europe . American soldiers got sick, English soldiers, French, German. As it spread, the microbe mutated day by day, becoming more and more deadly. By the time the silent traveler came back to America , it had become a relentless killer.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt On a rainy day in September, Dr. Victor Vaughan , acting Surgeon General of the Army, received urgent orders: proceed to a base near Boston called Camp Devens . Devens was about to change Dr. Vaughan's world forever.
Victor Vaughan I saw hundreds of young stalwart men in uniform coming into the wards of the hospital. Every bed was full, yet others crowded in. Their faces wore a bluish cast; a cough brought up the blood-stained sputum.
Linda Hunt On the day that Vaughan arrived, 63 men died at Camp Devens .
[sil.]
Linda Hunt An autopsy revealed lungs that were swollen, filled with fluid, and strangely blue. Doctors were stunned. What in the name of God was happening to these lungs? When the strange new disease was finally identified, it turned out to be a very old and familiar one: influenza, the flu. But it was unlike any flu that anyone had ever seen.
Dr. Alfred Crosby AUTHOR
Dr. Alfred Crosby One of the factors that made this so particularly frightening was that everybody had a preconception of what the flu was. It's a miserable cold and after a few days you're up and around. This was a flu that put people into bed as if they'd been hit with a 2 x 4, that turned into pneumonia, that turned people blue and black, and killed them. It was ah, a ah, a flu out of ah, some sort of a horror story. They never had dreamed that, that influenza could ever do anything like this to people before.
Linda Hunt Soldiers carried the disease swiftly from one military base to the next. They did it just by breathing.
Dr. Shirley Fannin If an individual with influenza were standing in front of a room full of people, coughing, each cough would carry millions of particles with disease-causing organisms into the air. All the people breathing that air would have an opportunity to inhale a disease-causing organism. It doesn't take very long for one case to become 10,000 cases.
William Maxwell My first intimations about the epidemic were there was something that was happening to the troops. There didn't seem to be any reason to think it, it would ever, ever have anything to do with us and, and yet, ah, in a gradual remorseless way, it kept moving closer and closer.
Linda Hunt For a time, life in America went on untouched. Suffragettes demanded the vote for women. Airmail service began zooming between New York and Chicago , flying time, 10 hours, five minutes. On September 11th, Babe Ruth led the Boston Red Sox to victory in the World Series. But on that same day, on the sidewalks of Quincy, Massachusetts , three civilians dropped dead. Influenza was out in the world.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt From Boston , the disease moved down the Eastern Seaboard to New York , to Philadelphia , and beyond.
William Maxwell Rumors of this alarming situation had reached this very small town of 12,000 people in the Midwest . I know that my parents were worried. I, I, I paid less attention to their words than I did to the sounds of their voices and when they discussed it, I heard anxiety. My mother was expecting a baby and so, ah, my father and mother had no choice but to take me to my father's sister's house where we were not comfortable. It was a dark, gloomy house. I can best suggest the quality of the house by saying in the living room, there was a framed photograph of my grandfather in his coffin. It was a very strange room. There was a vase with peacock feathers in it, and my aunt didn't know; I don't know if anybody else in Lincoln knew ah, that peacock feathers bring bad luck.
Daniel Tonkel
Daniel Tonkel The first time that I was aware that something was amiss in our normal living was when my father told me, "Son, most of the employees are sick. We don't have anyone left to run the store. Everyone is home sick or in the hospital sick." And within a week or 10 days, my father told me that ah, this saleslady had passed away and another one had passed away. So as I recall out of the eight or 10 employees, four of them passed away and the passing away came about so quickly.
Anna Milano It was a mild day and we were sitting on the step. Diagonally across from us, there was a little, a girl, a 15-year-old girl was just buried. Towards the evening, we heard a lot of screaming going on and in that same house, a little baby, 18 months old passed away, in that same family.
[sil.]
Dr. Shirley Finnin For a physician, it must have been very, very confusing being confronted with patients that come to you and within ah, 12 hours, before you even have a chance to do anything, they're dead. This was happening too fast.
Linda Hunt Even children began to see it coming. A little ditty was heard in playgrounds.
I had a little bird. Its name was Enza. I opened the window and in flew Enza. I had a little bird. Its name was Enza. I opened the window and in flew Enza.
Linda Hunt Most officials, however, failed to recognize the growing threat. Royal Copeland , Health Commissioner of New York City announced, "The city is in no danger of an epidemic. No need for our people to worry." Copeland would let things take their own course.
Dr. Alfred Crosby The first reaction of the authorities, for many of the most important ones, was just flat out denial. They didn't know what was happening. They didn't know what to do and therefore they did the human thing which is to say it's not happening.
Linda Hunt With the war escalating, Federal officials continued to put Americans at risk. One September day, they called 13 million young men to register for the draft. The men jammed together in schoolhouses, city halls, post offices.
Dr. Alfred Crosby There were two enormously important things going on at once, and they were at right angles to each other. One, of course, was the influenza epidemic, which dictated that you should sort of shut everything down, and the war which demanded that everything should speed up, that certainly the factories should continue ah, operating, you should continue to have bond drives, ah, soldiers should be put on boats and sent off to France . It's as if we could, as a society, only contain one big idea at a time and the big idea was the war.
Linda Hunt With America's tunnel vision focused on the war, throngs turned out for enormous parades supporting Liberty Loan drives. In Philadelphia , 200,000 sardined in the streets. The crowd linked arms, sang patriotic songs, breathed on each other, infected each other. And in the days that followed, the flu ripped into Philadelphia like a freshly-sharpened knife. Harriet Ferrell's family lived on Brooklyn Street .
Harriet Hasty Ferrell
Harriet Hasty Ferrell It was really a terrible experience for the people. There were so many people sick. In our household, it was the four of us in bed, and my uncle and aunt on the third floor apartment with their son, so my mother was caring for seven sick people in our home.
Cathryn Guyler
Cathryn Guyler When my mother became ill, that's when I knew we were in trouble. I only knew it from my child's eye and my child's eye was five years old. I wanted to go and get in her bed and it wasn't allowed. They didn't want me to get sick either, do you see? And they brought in a little bed into her room. My mother saw me miserable in that little bed that they brought in for me, tucked me in her bed because she didn't like to see me unhappy. And, of course, I promptly got the flu with her, as you could imagine and there was fun in that for me until it became so painful.
William Maxwell
William Maxwell I was a skinny little boy with an enormous appetite. Just as my plate was put in front of me, I felt no desire for food. My aunt put her hand on my forehead and ah, got up from the table and took me upstairs and put me to bed because I had a high fever. And I think what happened was that I slept and slept and slept and slept.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt No one knew what was causing the epidemic, but there was no shortage of guesses.
William Sardo
William Sardo There were rumors that ran rampant of all types and sizes and one of the rumors I remember, ah, very explicitly, was that the Germans had planted the germs for the spread of influenza.
Linda Hunt Flamboyant evangelist Billy Sunday thought the cause was as simple as sin. "We can meet here tonight and pray down the epidemic," Sunday said. But even as he spoke, people in the audience collapsed with the flu. One agonized official in the stricken East sent an urgent warning west. "Hunt up your woodworkers and set them to making coffins. Then take your street laborers and set them to digging graves."
[sil.]
Linda Hunt The flu was now moving into small towns, deep in the heart of the country.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt Lee Reay was living in Meadow, Utah .
Lee Reay
Lee Reay We were very concerned in our town because it was moving south down the highway and we were next. My father was selected as the health officer. We had never had a health officer in our town before, but ah, we felt now that we needed one and so my dad went out to the city limits signs and I went with him, and we put a sign that said, "This town is quarantined. Do not stop". So, we had purposely isolated ourselves. But it wasn't enough. The disease came anyway; the mailman brought it.
Dr. Shirley Fannin EPIDEMIOLOGIST
Dr. Shirley Fannin You can't barrier yourself from being exposed because the person who looks healthy may be spreading the disease, and that was part of the horror. We can't get away from respiratory diseases of other people because we all have to breathe.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt In Denver , Katherine Anne Porter's romance was cut short. She too became sick. Soon, she was delirious. But Porter's dashing young lieutenant stayed by her side.
[sil.]
Katherine Anne Porter He was so patient with me, those nights when I was sick, getting me things, and always just sitting there. When I would wake up, he would be there.
Linda Hunt Her fever rose so high that her hair turned white, then fell out.
Katherine Anne Porter There was only that pain, only that room. There was only this one moment and it was a dream of time.
William Maxwell I remember that time was a blur as I was lying in that little upstairs room and ah, I would wake up and it would be daylight and I'd wake up, the next time I woke up it would be dark. And it might be dark when I woke up, it might be daylight. I had no sense of day and night, and ah, I felt sick and hollow inside.
And in flew Enza. I had a little bird. Its name was Enza. I opened the window and in flew Enza.
Linda Hunt And in flew Enza. Hospitals overflowed. Emergency relief centers sprang up in parks and playgrounds. But practically every available doctor and nurse had been sent to Europe . The ones who remained were asked to perform the impossible. Near Chicago , a young nurse named Josey Mabel Brown arrived at Great Lakes Naval Station and was promptly assigned a ward with 42 beds.
Carla Morrissey NIECE OF JOSEY MABEL BROWN
Carla Morrissey And she walked into the ward, not only were the 42 beds full, but there were boys that were laying on the floors and on the stretchers waiting for that boy in the bed to die. They were having raging fevers and delirium and profuse nose bleeds and their lungs would collapse and it would go into this horrid, bloody pneumonia.
Dr. Alfred Crosby AUTHOR
Dr. Alfred Crosby When the 1918 flu killed, which it so often did, it killed because of what it did to the lungs. It ah, filled up the lungs with ah, with fluid and so these people ah, these people drowned, ah, only they didn't drown in the Atlantic Ocean , they drowned in their own fluids.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt The epidemic was now a national crisis. Something had to be done. In many places, officials rushed through laws requiring people to wear masks in public. All of America , it seemed, put on masks. At last, many thought, they were safe.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt But masks didn't help. They were thin and porous. No serious restraint to tiny microbes. It was like trying to keep out dust with chicken wire. In Washington, D.C. , Commissioner Louis Brownlow banned all public gatherings. He closed the city schools, theaters and bars. He quarantined the sick. He did everything he had the power to do. But the death rate in Washington kept rising. A resolution shot through Congress, giving the Public Health Service a million dollars to fight the flu. Biochemists around the country worked feverishly to develop a vaccine. Hundreds were produced. Then, a researcher in Massachusetts came up with the most promising solution. Hopes rose; perhaps a cure was at hand. San Francisco's mayor wired for a huge shipment. A special envoy carried the vaccine across the country on the fleet Twentieth Century Express. Soon over 18,000 people in the city had been inoculated. But even vaccines didn't help.
Dr. Shirley Fannin They thought it was caused by a bacteria, so they made up a vaccine with the bacteria they thought was influenza. But, you can't make a vaccine if you're looking at the wrong causative organism. They were on the wrong track. The influenza was caused by a virus.
Dr. Alfred Crosby Science ah, knew next to nothing about viruses at this time. The optical microscopes they had couldn't show you a virus. A virus is much too small for them. Nobody would ever see virus until the electron microscope came along, and that was decades ah, after that. These poor scientists were looking for a needle in a haystack ah, when they didn't know it was a needle they were looking for and the needle was too small for them to see. No wonder they didn't find it.
Linda Hunt Medical science, at the very moment of its great rise to power, had failed to provide a cure.
Victor Vaughan At that moment, I decided never again to prate about the great achievements of science. The deadly influenza demonstrated the inferiority of human inventions. Victor Vaughan .
Linda Hunt With science powerless, many people turned to folk remedies and quick fixes.
William Sardo There was some quackery that existed at the time. There were all kinds of, of gimmicks that were being pursued by people in desperation.
John De Lano
John De Lano I had camphor balls in, in a little sack around my neck. I know I couldn't stand myself, let alone somebody coming near me. I smelled so bad, I guess, in those days.
Harriet Hasty Ferrell
Harriet Hasty Ferrell We used turpentine on sugar. We used kerosene on sugar, a few drops. You could smell this medication before you got too close to them, but it wasn't too bad because so many people had these different type medications until we were all smelling bad.
[sil.]
Lee Reay Everybody was asking for medicine and there wasn't any. So dad came home and said, "We've got to make medicine some way." And so ah, in our kitchen, on our cook stove, dad stewed up about five gallons. It wasn't a real medicine but it smelled like medicine and it tasted like medicine, and we put a lot of honey in it so that it would taste pretty good and ah, we passed it out to everyone who wanted medicine. It went in a hurry. There wasn't much left. It didn't do any harm. Most of them thought it did good.
Dr. Alfred Crosby In the middle of a crisis you have to do something and it's certainly an American characteristic that we have to do something even if it's wrong.
Linda Hunt Folk remedies might have been wrong, but doctors were just as helpless.
Carla Morrissey They absolutely didn't know what to do for treatment of these patients. The ambulances would arrive in the morning. The drivers would bring in four living patients, but the nurses would go ahead and wrap these patients in the winding sheets, and they would put toe tags on the boys before they were even dead.
Linda Hunt One doctor told a patient's wife, "This is my 25th case and I've lost the first 24." A 12-year-old boy was told by his doctor, "Get on the waiting list for a casket."
Harriet Hasty Ferrell My mother called a doctor because we, the whole family was sick with this flu. And I, being the infant baby, was very sick to the point that the doctor thought that I would not make it and he told my mother that it wasn't necessary to feed me anymore because I wasn't gonna live.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt In the month of September, some 12,000 people died of influenza in America . But those numbers would be dwarfed for the full horror now began. October would be the cruelest month.
Anna Milani
Anna Milani In the street, there were crepes at the door. If it was a young person, they put a white crepe at the door, if it was a, a a, um, a middle-aged, they put a black, and if it was an elderly one, much older, they put a grey crepe at the door, signifying who died. So there were, we were children and we was, we were excited to find out who died next.
William Sardo
William Sardo My father, my older brother and an uncle were all engaged in the funeral directing business. We lived in a funeral home. The influenza epidemic ah, became so bad that the living room, the dining room were all occupied by row upon row of caskets. The fearsome part was that that these were friends of yours that were passing away. These were whole families that you knew. These were people you went to school with or went to church with. It was very eerie, very, very eerie.
[sil.]
John De Lano The undertaker which was a half a block away from me had ah, pine boxes on the sidewalk piled high. Me and my two friends would go down there and play on the boxes. It was like climbing the pyramids up and down and around and the whole bit, jumping off, and my mother told me that I should never go down there, "Don't go on those boxes because there are people in them that have died." But these two friends of mine got sick right after that and ah, so did I.
Lee Reay
Lee Reay My father being the health officer was very concerned about the Indians who were our neighbors. They were only six miles away. So dad and the city marshal rode up there one day to see how things were going at the Indian camps and they were horrified at what they saw. After an Indian died, his family and friends would sit around chanting him to the Happy Hunting Grounds and they'd spa, spend all night there. And by that time, they were all exposed, everybody had the flu. Ultimately, it killed about half of the Indians.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt No one was safe. In Washington , Victor Vaughan was working late trying to make sense of the hellish chaos. He uncovered an unnerving fact. Usually, influenza kills only the weak, the very young and very old, but this time it had a different target. People in the very prime of life, from 21 to 29, were the most vulnerable of all.
Victor Vaughan This infection, like war, kills the young, vigorous, robust adults. The husky male either made a speedy and rather abrupt recovery or was likely to die.
Dr. Alfred Crosby The situation was upside down and backwards. Ah, a disease that's supposed to be a mild disease is killing people. The people it's killing are the strongest members, the most robust ah, members of our ah, society.
Linda Hunt For example, the soldiers. In Europe , the flu was devastating both sides. Seventy thousand American soldiers were sick. In some units, the flu killed 80 percent of the men. General John Pershing made a desperate plea for reinforcements. But that would mean sending soldiers across the Atlantic on troop ships.
Dr. Alfred Crosby There's nothing more crowded than a troop ship. It's just being jammed in there like sardines, and if somebody has a respiratory disease, everybody is gonna get it.
Linda Hunt President Woodrow Wilson now faced an agonizing decision. Sending the soldiers would be signing thousands of death warrants. Wilson gazed out his office window. After a long moment, he nodded. The troop shipments would have to continue. And then, the President turned to his aide. "I wonder if you have heard this limerick?" "I had a little bird and his name was Enza".
Its name was Enza. I opened the window and in flew Enza.
[sil.]
Katherine Anne Porter I lay like a stone at the farthest bottom of life. The smell of death was in my own body.
Linda Hunt Katherine Anne Porter was finally admitted to the hospital, but she was now separated from her lieutenant. She was so sick that she was left on a stretcher in the hallway, left there to die. Porter's newspaper quietly set the type for her obituary. In New York , 851 people died of the flu in a single day. But the greatest horror came to Philadelphia . In one week in October, the death rate there was 700 times higher than normal.
Anna Milano In October, we were all sick. We had headaches, pains in the legs and stomach, vomiting and everything. We were all sleeping close to one another because we only had two beds in one room. Harry couldn't stay with us because he was too sick, and I was like a second mother to Harry . Harry was always close to me. So when he was very sick, he kept calling me all the time and I was always beside him, so my mother said, "While Harry's sleeping, you go and lie down." And my mother said he, he opened his eyes, his eyes went back and forth, and his head went back and forth and he said, " Annie ." My name was Nanina , in Italian, " Nanina , Nanina ," and he died with my name in his mouth.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt In Philadelphia , death carts roamed the city. It was a scene from the time of the Black Plague.
Harriet Hasty Ferrell So many people died until they were instructed to ask for wooden boxes and to put the corpse, the people on the front porches. An open truck came through the neighborhoods and picked up the bodies.
Linda Hunt Still, the dead sometimes lay in the gutters, abandoned. Over at Potter's Field , they began to use a steam shovel to dig trenches for graves, mass graves.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt Over 11,000 people would die in Philadelphia alone that October. In Illinois , William Maxwell's mother had just given birth. He was still staying at his aunt's house.
William Maxwell My only knowledge of what was going on was the telephone which I could hear because my room was ah, near the head of the stairs. And I heard my aunt say, " Will , oh no." And then, "If you want me to." And she came into my room and she tried to tell us what happened and the, the tears ran down her face and so she didn't need to tell me. I knew that the worst that could happen had happened. My mother was marvelous and ah, when she died, the shine went out of everything.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt In 31 shocking days, the flu would kill over 195,000 Americans. It was the deadliest month in this nation's history.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt Coffins were in such demand that they were often stolen. Undertakers had to place armed guards around their prized boxes. The orderly life of America began to break down. All over the country, farms and factories shut down. Schools and churches closed. Homeless children wandered the streets. Their parents vanished. The vibrant and optimistic nation seemed to be falling apart.
Daniel Tonkel
Daniel Tonkel People were actually afraid to talk to one another. It was almost like, "Don't breathe in my face, don't look at me and breathe in my face because you may give me the germ that I don't want," and ah, you never knew from day to day who was gonna to be next on the death list.
[sil.]
William Sardo Everybody was ah, living in deadly fear because it was so quick, so sudden, and so terrifying. It destroyed the intimacy that existed amongst people in those days of the early 20th century.
[sil.]
Dr. Alfred Crosby An epidemic ah, erodes social cohesiveness because the source of your danger is your fellow human beings. The source of your danger is your wife, children, parents, and so on. So if an epidemic goes on long enough and the bodies start to pile up and nobody can dig draves, graves fast enough to put the people into them, then you, ah, morality does start to break down.
Linda Hunt Violence broke out. In San Francisco , a Health Department inspector shot a man who refused to wear a mask. In Chicago , a worker shouted, "I'll cure them my own way," and then cut the throats of his wife and four children.
Dr. Shirley Fannin EPIDEMIOLOGIST
Dr. Shirley Fannin People were surrounded by traumatic death and they didn't have any idea how far it would go. Was it gonna to kill everybody? Could this be the end of the world? Is this Armageddon that the street corner ministers are preaching about?
Linda Hunt In Washington , Victor Vaughan came to a frightening conclusion.
Victor Vaughan If the epidemic continues its mathematical rate of acceleration, civilization could easily disappear from the face of the earth.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt But a miraculous thing began to happen. As mysteriously as it had come, the terror began to slip away. By early November, the flu had virtually disappeared from Boston . The toll in Washington fell below 50 a week. Even in ravaged Philadelphia , life was returning to normal. Then, on November 11, the Armistice ended The Great War. In San Francisco , the scene was surreal. Thirty thousand people paraded through the streets, all dancing, all singing, all wearing masks.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt The country had a lot to celebrate; not only was the war over, but the worst of the epidemic was passing.
Dr. Shirley Fannin In light of our knowledge of influenza and the way it works, we do understand that it probably ran out of fuel. It ran out of people who were susceptible. It's like the firestorm. It sweeps through and it has so many victims, and the survivors developed immunity.
Linda Hunt But for some survivors, like Katherine Anne Porter , the return of health was not the end of pain. Her dashing lieutenant, who had faithfully tended her, was suddenly dead himself of influenza. The lieutenant's death, Porter later said, divided her life in two.
Katherine Anne Porter It was one of the most terrible things that ever happened to me, that he should have died and I should have lived. He died and it seems to me that I died then.
John De Lano
John De Lano And then when we got out again and went back to school, I was shocked to see that ah, my friends were not around; they weren't home. I would knock on their door and they would open the door just a little bit and says, "No, Jimmy is not here" or " Frankie's not here," and ah, "Where is he?" "Let your mother tell you." They wouldn't tell me. "Let your mother tell you." I was a pretty lonely kid at the time because these were my friends that I played with all those years and I went to school with and ah, when I lost them, my, my whole world changed.
Dr. Alfred Crosby AUTHOR
Dr. Alfred Crosby The epidemic killed a very, very conservative estimate, 550,000 Americans in 10 months. That's more Americans than died in combat in all the wars of this century. Ah, and the epidemic ah, killed at least 30 million ah, in the world, and infected ah, the majority of the human species.
Linda Hunt As soon as the dying stopped, the forgetting began.
Dr. Alfred Crosby It is in ah, the individual memory of a great many of us ah, but it's not in our collective ah, memory. That, for me, is, is the greatest mystery. How we could have forgotten anything so horrendous, so massively horrendous, ah, as, as this, this epidemic which killed so many of us, killed us so fast and our reaction was to forget it.
Dr. Shirley Fannin Why? You know, why wasn't that part of our memory or of our ah, history? And I think it's probably because it was so awful while it was happening, so frightening, that people just got rid of the memory, but it always lingers there as a kind of an uneasiness. If it happened once before, what's to say it's not going to happen again? The more we find out about influenza virus, the more real that fear becomes.
[sil.]
Linda Hunt The fall of 1918 was a time of horror, a time to forget. But some would always remember.
Anna Milano I remember my mother putting a white sheet or a white piece of cloth over his face and they closed the casket. I can't forget. It was very, very bad.
[sil.]
William Maxwell The effect of my mother's death was that I realized, for the first time and forever, that we were not safe. We were not beyond harm. My father did what he could. Ah, he kept us together as a family, but from that time on there was a sadness, ah, which had not existed before. There was a deep down sadness that never quite went away because ah, I knew people aren't safe and nobody's safe. Terrible things could happen to anybody.
AMERICAN EXPERIENCE pbs.org
There is more about influenza at American Experience online. Delve deeper into the flu's effect on three American cities. Examine recent findings on the 1918 pandemic and the chances it could happen again. All this and more at pbs.org
PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY Robert Kenner WRITTEN BY Ken Chowder CO-PRODUCER Alla Savranskaia EDITOR Alison Ellwood MUSIC Mark Adler NARRATOR Linda Hunt CINEMATOGRAPHY Don Lenzer Paul Goldsmith Nancy Schreiber Steven W. Ross SOUND Bruce Perlman John Secca STOCK FOOTAGE AND PHOTO RESEARCH Helen Hodd Scheer Elizabeth Olsen ASSISTANT CAMERA Jeff Victor Stacey Cohen Shana Hagan Kit Kalionzes GAFFER John Priebe GRIP Patrick Murphy ART DIRECTOR Marguerite Kenner ADDITIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY Buddy Squires James Mulryan CONSULTANTS Dr. Alred Crosby Dr. Carolyn Bridges Dr. Jeffrey Taubenberger ASSISTANT EDITORS Thomas Teltser Helen Hood Scheer PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS Diana De Cilio Eric Guerin Fred Pichel TRANSCRIPTS Leigh Ryan LABORATORIES Fotokem Yale Labs POST PRODUCTION SERVICES Matchframe COLORIST Brian Hutchings ON-LINE EDITOR Craig Price SOUND DESIGN / MIXING Kent Gibson Tom Mitchell Vern Pershing MOTION CONTROL CAMERA Lars Bunch VOICES Erwin Immerman Marguerite Kenner THE PRODUCERS GRATEFULLY ACKNOWLEDGE THE ASSISTANCE OF Dr. Nancy Cox , CDC Columba Voltz Michael Donahue Suzanna Turner Joan Givner Jack Fincher Tess Kenner Nisa Schoonhaven Alice and Rebecca Goldsmith Ben and Sam Sisson Mathew McGuire Larry Hertzog Maurice Rinaldi DeMille Halliburton Jack Green / US Naval Historical Society Joseph Casino / Philadelphia Archdiocesan Research Center Isabelle Meyer / Doctor's House, Glendale Burbank Historical Society Sara Funston Anthony Damiano / Damiano Restaurant, DelRey Beach, FL STOCK FOOTAGE COURTESY OF Film / Audio Services National Archives John E. Allen, Inc. Archive Films University of South Carolina Image Bank Creative Television Associates National Library of Medicine Archives, The New York Hospital Cornell Medical Center PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF National Archives Museum of History Industry, Seattle National Museum of Health Medicine, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Collection of Immigrant City Archives, Lawrence, MA American Red Cross Corbis-Bettman US Naval Historical Center National Library of Medicine Library of Congress Indiana Historical Society North Carolina Division of Archives and History, Raleigh Middle Georgia Archives, Washington Memorial Library, Macon, GA Rochester Museum Science Center Iowa State University, Ames California Historical Society Frank Marie - Therese Wood Print Collection, Alexandria, VA Archives, The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah Manuscripts Division, I Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah Utah State Historical Society San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Libray Philadelphia Archdiocesan Historical Research Center Archive Photo Culver Pictures Brown Brothers Lincoln Library, Sangamon Valley Collection Germantown Historical Society University of Maryland at College Park Libraries, K A Portex Collection Photo Researchers, Inc. FOR AMERICAN EXPERIENCE POST PRODUCTION Greg Shea Glenn Fukushima SERIES DESIGNER Alison Kennedy ON-LINE EDITOR Spencer Gentry SOUND MIX John Jenkins SERIES THEME Mark Adler BUSINESS MANAGER John Van Hagen LEGAL Jay Fialkov Maureen Jordan PROJECT ADMINISTRATION Sherene Ing Vanessa Ruiz Rebekah Suggs ONLINE Nancy Farrell Ravi Jain Li Wei DIRECTOR NEW MEDIA Maria Daniels PUBLICITY Susan Trabucchi Daphne B. Noyes Johanna Baker Lauren Prestileo SERIES EDITOR Susan Bellows SERIES MANAGER James E. Dunford COORDINATING PRODUCER Susan Mottau SERIES PRODUCER Sharon Grimberg EXECUTIVE PRODUCER Mark Samels A Robert Kenner Films production for AMERICAN EXPERIENCE 1998 WGBH Educational Foundation All Rights Reserved WGBH BOSTON
American Experience is made possible by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation who enhance public understanding of the role of technology. The foundation also seeks to portray the lives of the men and women engaged in scientific and technological pursuit.
At the Scotts Company, we help make gardens more beautiful, lawns greener, trees taller. If there's a better business to be in, please let us know.
At Liberty Mutual Insurance, we do everything we can to help prevent accidents and make America a safer place. Liberty Mutual is proud to support American Experience.
American Experience is also made possible by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
cpb A PRIVATE CORPORATION FUNDED BY THE AMERICAN PEOPLE CPB.ORG
And contributions to your PBS station from viewers like you. Thank you.