Summer 1873 and the first cases
Any visitor to
Shreveport in the summer of 1873 would have seen a vibrant and
prosperous river port town with a dense population of commercial and
residential activity concentrated near what is today known to locals
simply as “the riverfront.” The city’s population swelled in just mere
decades after its founding in the 1830s, and Shreveport provided an
important nexus between the commercial traffic entering Louisiana at the
port of New Orleans and the Texas Trail. The Red River was ground-zero
for this remarkable economic growth.
On
Aug. 20, 1873, three strangers showed up at the Market Street Infirmary
with serious symptoms but were turned away and not treated for whatever
reason. The next day, all were dead. The local news reported the names
of the first three victims as Frank Nally, age unknown; James Lewis, age
16; and the third victim simply as “unknown.” The city was quite
reluctant to call the cause Yellow Fever since these were seemingly
isolated cases. However, by Aug. 22, four more people were dead of the
same illness, and the death toll continued to climb. Over the coming
days and weeks, as more and more people fell ill and died, the city
could no longer deny the obvious presence of “Yellow Jack.”
It
provides an interesting perspective to consider that in 1873, little
was known about the cause of yellow fever, even though it was a frequent
visitor nearly every summer on record to many cities of the United
States. Medical experts of the era believed it was person-to-person
transmittable, not understanding that the virus requires a third vector –
the mosquito. It is carried from person to person through the mosquito
population feeding on humans; hence, its prevalence in the summer and
early fall months. A University of Kentucky medical student named
Augustine Booth came to Shreveport to study the outbreak and produced an
interesting map showing areas of known infection, significant
landmarks, and interestingly, he also noted areas of “stagnant water.”
Although Booth did not fully understand the implications of this
observation, he nevertheless documented something quite important for
future medical science.
In
Shreveport in 1873, local officials attributed the cause of the fever
to a variety of unusual events. There was a steamboat named the Ruby
that was carrying a load of cattle and sank in the river near downtown,
drowning all the cattle aboard. The carcasses remained to rot at the
riverfront and contributed to what many were already describing as “the
miasma,” or bad air. A circus had recently arrived in town as well, and
some locals were quick to attribute the illness to either the circus
animals, the circus performers, or both.
The Daily Shreveport Times, in publication since
the previous year of 1872, provided a daily death record and offered
frequent commentary on the condition of the city, especially during the
early days of the outbreak. In the beginning, there was a general
denial, considering the sobering economic consequences of publicly
naming yellow fever. By Sept. 1, neither city officials nor the main
news source could deny that yellow fever had struck Shreveport. However,
these sources still mitigated it by denying that the fever existed at
epidemic proportions.
At
the same time, volunteer forces were organizing into a massive
compassionate response to the very real human crisis. The next
installment of this series will examine the significant role of the
Howard Association in Shreveport’s care and recovery, an organization
named for the British philanthropist and social justice pioneer John
Howard.