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To: Pelham

Western Kansas if pretty dry and sparsely populated.

How can there be much flu out there?


6 posted on 02/08/2018 10:52:04 PM PST by Paladin2
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To: Paladin2

I’m not sure, but that’s where experts on the 1918 Flu seem to think that it began. There may well have been an Army training camp in western Kansas, this was during our participation in World War One- and Army camps are where that flu hit early and particularly hard.


8 posted on 02/08/2018 11:01:34 PM PST by Pelham (California, a subsidiary of Mexico, Inc.)
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To: Paladin2

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC340389/

“...So if the contemporary observers were correct, if American troops carried the virus to Europe, where in the United States did it begin?

Both contemporary epidemiological studies and lay histories of the pandemic have identified the first known outbreak of epidemic influenza as occurring at Camp Funston, now Ft. Riley, in Kansas. But there was one place where a previously unknown – and remarkable – epidemic of influenza occurred.

Haskell County, Kansas, lay three hundred miles to the west of Funston. There the smell of manure meant civilization. People raised grains, poultry, cattle, and hogs. Sod-houses were so common that even one of the county’s few post offices was located in a dug-out sod home. In 1918 the population was just 1,720, spread over 578 square miles. But primitive and raw as life could be there, science had penetrated the county in the form of Dr. Loring Miner. Enamored of ancient Greece – he periodically reread the classics in Greek – he epitomized William Welch’s comment that “the results [of medical education] were better than the system.” His son was also a doctor, trained in fully scientific ways, serving in the Navy in Boston.

In late January and early February 1918 Miner was suddenly faced with an epidemic of influenza, but an influenza unlike any he had ever seen before. Soon dozens of his patients – the strongest, the healthiest, the most robust people in the county – were being struck down as suddenly as if they had been shot. Then one patient progressed to pneumonia. Then another. And they began to die. The local paper Santa Fe Monitor, apparently worried about hurting morale in wartime, initially said little about the deaths but on inside pages in February reported, “Mrs. Eva Van Alstine is sick with pneumonia. Her little son Roy is now able to get up... Ralph Lindeman is still quite sick... Goldie Wolgehagen is working at the Beeman store during her sister Eva’s sickness... Homer Moody has been reported quite sick... Mertin, the young son of Ernest Elliot, is sick with pneumonia... Pete Hesser’s children are recovering nicely... Ralph McConnell has been quite sick this week (Santa Fe Monitor, February 14th, 1918).”

The epidemic got worse. Then, as abruptly as it came, it disappeared. Men and women returned to work. Children returned to school. And the war regained its hold on people’s thoughts....”


9 posted on 02/08/2018 11:06:05 PM PST by Pelham (California, a subsidiary of Mexico, Inc.)
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To: Paladin2

Western Kansas if pretty dry and sparsely populated.

How can there be much flu out there?

If you were a flu, what better place to hide than a sparsely populated area?


14 posted on 02/09/2018 3:15:17 AM PST by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now it is your turn ...)
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To: Paladin2

Was there a military base there?


17 posted on 02/09/2018 5:29:19 AM PST by Moonman62 (Make America Great Again!)
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