It was an ordinary day. Reading a variety of stories telling about the pandemic that struck the United States slightly over 100 years ago. Known as the "Spanish Flu," it struck as World War I was drawing to a close. The virus began in the United States in Kansas and was carried to Europe where it mutated and returned with our returning soldiers. In March of 1918 the city of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, my hometown, had just finished celebrating its Centennial Anniversary. At the time there were slightly over 172 thousand residents in Lancaster County or about a third of what call Lancaster County home today. The disease caused confusion and conflicting opinions, just as it is dong in today's Lancaster. The flu in Lancaster claimed its first casualty on September 26. I began a search of the Lancaster Newspaper's archives and found quite a few stories written about the 1918 Flu. A story in the Monday, October 7 Daily New Era reported "3,000 CASES OF SPANISH "FLU" AFFLICT THE CITY."
October 7 Daily New Era |
October 16 Lancaster Intelligencer |
October 16 Lancaster Intelligencer |
October 31 Lancaster Intelligencer |
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