Posted on 10/06/2015 11:21:43 PM PDT by beaversmom
SYNOPSIS
The American military experience in World War I and the influenza pandemic were closely intertwined. The war fostered influenza in the crowded conditions of military camps in the United States and in the trenches of the Western Front in Europe. The virus traveled with military personnel from camp to camp and across the Atlantic, and at the height of the American military involvement in the war, September through November 1918, influenza and pneumonia sickened 20% to 40% of U.S. Army and Navy personnel. These high morbidity rates interfered with induction and training schedules in the United States and rendered hundreds of thousands of military personnel non-effective. During the American Expeditionary Forces' campaign at Meuse-Argonne, the epidemic diverted urgently needed resources from combat support to transporting and caring for the sick and the dead. Influenza and pneumonia killed more American soldiers and sailors during the war than did enemy weapons.
In the fall of 1918, U.S. Army and Navy medical officers in camps across the country presided over the worst epidemic in American history, but the story was not new. War and disease have been linked throughout history as armies, weapons, and human pathogens have met on the battlefield. The conquistadores brought with them diseases that devastated the New World; typhus plagued Napoleon's armies; and typhoid fever humiliated the American Army during the Spanish-American War. But now U.S. Army and Navy personnel knew how to test and sanitize water supplies, vaccinate troops against typhoid and smallpox, and treat or prevent other infections. Modern bacteriology, it seemed, had tamed many diseases. Navy Surgeon General William C. Braisted proudly stated that infectious diseases that formerly carried off their thousands, such as yellow fever, typhus, cholera, and typhoid, have all yielded to our modern knowledge of their causes and our consequent logical measures taken for their prevention.1
Twentieth-century warfare, however, had evolved to an even more deadly scale as industrialized armies of millions battled on the plains of Eastern Europe, the cliffs of Gallipoli, and in the deadly trenches of the 550-mile-long Western Front. When the European arms race exploded into war in 1914, the empires shocked themselves and the world with the killing power of their artillery and machine guns, their U-boats and mines, and their poison gas. These new weapons generated new, horrible injuries that took life and limb in a flash or festered into gangrenous wounds that could further maim and kill. The carnage traumatized some men into shellshock, and poison gases burned and suffocated others so horribly that nurses dreaded caring for them because they could provide little comfort. War diseasesnotably the soldiers' nemeses diarrhea, dysentery, and typhusflourished, and the trenches offered new maladies such as trench foot, an infection caused by wearing sodden boots and standing in water and mud for days on end, and trench fever, a debilitating fever transmitted by body lice.
Then, in the fourth dreadful year of the war, as the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) assumed fighting strength and prepared their first great offensive against the Germans, the flu struck. By the War Department's most conservative count, influenza sickened 26% of the Armymore than one million menand killed almost 30,000 before they even got to France.2,3 On both sides of the Atlantic, the Army lost a staggering 8,743,102 days to influenza among enlisted men in 1918.4 (p. 1448) The Navy recorded 5,027 deaths and more than 106,000 hospital admissions for influenza and pneumonia out of 600,000 men, but given the large number of mild cases that were never recorded, Braisted put the sickness rate closer to 40%.5,6 (p. 2458)
The Army and Navy medical services may have tamed typhoid and typhus, but more American soldiers, sailors, and Marines would succumb to influenza and pneumonia than would die on the industrialized battlefields of the Great War. The story of the influenza epidemic in the military is often lost in the historical narrative of the Great War, included merely as a coda to that four-year horror, coinciding with the final battles and the Armistice. But an examination of medical reports and War Department and Department of the Navy documents from the war reveals that the war and the epidemic were intertwined.7 World War I and influenza collaborated: the war fostered disease by creating conditions in the trenches of France that some epidemiologists believe enabled the influenza virus to evolve into a killer of global proportions. In turn, disease shaped the war effort by rendering much of the Army and Navy non-effective and diverting resources, personnel, and scarce human attention and energy from the military campaign. The exigencies of war also thwarted many of the efforts such as crowd mitigation and quarantines to control the epidemic. The influenza epidemic in the U.S. military therefore provides a cautionary tale about the power of war to change the health environment and the power of disease to influence the conduct of war.
This set up Old Gimlet Eye, Smedley Darlington Butler, tough old bastard but a Quaker who said “thee” and “thou” when talking with his Congressman Dad at home. Butler just did a decent administrative job cleaning up a disease ridden army camp in Belgium.
So in the early 30s when FDR took money off the gold standard, gold which Bubba’ s favorite Georgetown Prof Carroll Quigley said destabilized the economy sitting massively in the middle of the money-goods&services fulcrum—taking the country off the gold standard cut the wealthy’ s assets in half overnight.
There goes your government. Jock Morgan’s men working for DuPont want to retire FDR and put a Soldier in the Presidency. This is in Jules Archer’ s “The Plot to Seize the White House”. I’ll link to the full text in a later post.
The Soldier President they wanted to head their Coup was MacArthur, who would have kicked Harry S Truman down the stairs 25 years later if he’d been allowed to. But MacArthur had turned the Army on Veteran Bonus Marchers camped in a Washington DC park.
So they thought they could get Butler to be their man. But he went to HUAC and John McCormick, who was later Speaker of the House and confirmed the substance of sealed testimony. Time Magazine inadvertently confirmed it by ridiculing it.
This was big news in Macomb County, MI at the time. Particularly at Selfridge Field near Mt. Clemens.
http://www.127wg.ang.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123447202
I’ve heard where WWI was called on account of the flu. Seriously.
I’m sure it did play a factor - whether it was the main one....?
If this epidemic had serious effect, it was to reinforce the not-too-distant impact of Pasteur's findings on the germ theory of disease, on greater emphasis for indoor plumbing, running water, and personal hygiene in heath education.
We are the beneficiaries of the social outcomes of defense against such infections.
Until AIDS, that is, which is bound to cause great damage to our armed forces now that perversion in barracks life has become more than acceptable, rather than giving its practitioners a BCD.
bump for later
Epidemiologists have traced the likely origin of the Influenza Pandemic to the Ft. Riley, KS area in 1917. From there, it was spread throughout the US and overseas as troops were trained and deployed. News of the extent of the pandemic were suppressed both here and overseas for what we would now call “National Security” purposes. It wasn’t until it had spread to a neutral country, Spain, that the news began to spread. The pandemic has been known ever since as the “Spanish Flu”.
Modern Medicine was still in its infancy at the time. Young doctors, trained in modern methods, were drafted and sent overseas. The result was that the flu hit the US especially hard.
Got this from a wonderful book, “The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History”.
****This flu hit every settled nation very hard, ***
Worse. It also devastated the Inuit of the Arctic and the native tribes in the Amazon rain forest.
It appears everyone took a hit.
Interesting...1917 was the year that Selfridge Field became an active military airfield. One of the first in the US.
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