
Shreveport suffered the third worst Yellow Fever outbreak in the U.S. Five priests martyred in Shreveport’s Yellow Fever pandemic considered for sainthood
We offer you no salary, no recompense, no holiday or pension. But, much hard work, a poor dwelling, few consolations, many disappointments, frequent sickness, a violent or lonely death, and an unknown grave.”
Thus read the job notice written by Bishop Louis Dubourg of Louisiana and the Two Floridas in recruiting young French seminarians to come to Louisiana to work in early 1800.
Five Catholic priests eventually came to the area, and their work, their sacrifices, and, ultimately, their deaths are the backbone of a celebration this year to commemorate their roles in the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1873.
The events of August, September, October and November of 1873 will be celebrated this year in a series of events staged around the city to recall and reflect on the suffering and sacrifices of five Catholic priests and the entire region.
According to Dr. Cheryl White, professor of history at Louisiana State University in Shreveport, the project is a cultural outreach of the university. She told a press conference gathered on Aug. 21, 150 years after the first three recorded deaths of the epidemic, Shreveport holds the dubious distinction of suffering the third worst Yellow Fever outbreak in the United States.
“Three
men showed up at the Market Street Infirmary the night of Aug. 20,”
White recounted. “Market Street at Texas, there was an infirmary. Three
men showed up, but they were turned away, presumably because there was
nothing that could be done for them. The next morning, Aug. 21, 150
years ago, those three men were found dead on Texas Street between
Market and Milam.”
That was only the beginning, she said.
“Because
by the time of the arrival of the ‘merciful frost,’ that came in mid-
November, the city had lost one-quarter of its population to an illness
that was not at all understood.”
She
referred to the frost of November, which ended the onslaught of
mosquitoes. Little was understood about Yellow Fever then, mainly that
it was transmitted by mosquitoes instead of person-to-person.
She
said former Mayor Adrian Perkins’ administration stood up a commission
to commemorate the events surrounding this landmark moment in
Shreveport’s history. The commission was drawn from a diverse group in
the community: the Diocese of Shreveport, the city of Shreveport, LSU-
S, the Downtown Development Authority, several of the historic local
churches that
were contemporaneous with the plague, the Oakland Cemetery Preservation
Society, Shreveport Regional Arts Council and Shreveport Public Assembly
and Recreation, to name a few.
Mayor
Tom Arceneaux told the group that those who suffered through those
harrowing months reminded him of a passage from the Bible in Ezekiel.
“The famous passage where the Lord asks Ezekiel, ‘Can these bones live?’
Today marks the fact that, even after this epidemic, the third largest in the United States, the
question was ‘Can Shreveport live?’ And the answer is, yes. Shreveport
can live. And Shreveport does live. And we together as a community can
overcome any obstacles that face and challenge us if we will work
together. That’s what the people of Shreveport have a history of doing.”
Bishop
Francis Malone of the Diocese of Shreveport noted the five priests who
were lost to the disease were recruited by one of Martin, to come to
Shreveport to assist in his predecessors, Bishop Augustus Marie the
effort. “Imagine coming all the way from France to Shreveport,” Bishop
Malone said. “The letter written to them offered them nothing, no pay,
no good place to live. These five priests were young men. They were just
kids, 26 years of age.”
The
bishop echoed the mayor’s sentiments in that the sacrifice of these
young clerics showed that the community could, indeed, “rise above the
bones,” as Ezekiel said.
THE FIVE PRIESTS
Father Isadore Quémerais, Jean Pierre and Jean-Marie Biler, Louis Gergaud and François Le Vézouët.
The
Catholic Church has granted a unanimous assent that the Cause for
canonization continues for the five so-called Shreveport Martyrs. The
Cause now goes to the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Cause of Saints for
more investigation into whether they can become saints of the church.