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The Spanish Influenza Pandemic of 1918 [Spanish]
Early in September, 1918, the United States was invaded by a scourge of highly infectious and fatal disease, which spread with rapidity throughout the country, eventually infecting 500 million people worldwide, or about 27% of the world population, killing anywhere from 17 million to as many as 100 million, making it one of the deadliest epidemics in human history. Known as Spanish Influenza, it was pandemic in its nature. No one seemed to know much about the disease or its treatment, and medical science and public health agencies were alike unprepared to cope with it. Caught in the middle of this unfolding disaster was Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, historian Oscar Jewell Harvey. In his little-known 1920 book "The Spanish Influenza Pandemic of 1918," Harvey gives a first-hand account of how one middle-sized Pennsylvania city struggled to cope with the devastating plague which struck while America was preoccupied with fighting World War One. In introducing his book, Harvey writes that "it certainly was a disconcerting fact that, at the very time when vast numbers of the people in widely-distributed localities had organized themselves, through the Red Cross and other wellknown and efficient mediums, to fight disease and prevent suffering and death, we should be smitten with a visitation which caused more casualties and deaths among the peaceful citizens in the homeland than the deadly missiles and poisonous gases of the enemy effected among the American Expeditionary Forces overseas in the great World War." About the Author: Oscar J. Harvey was nationally renowned as historian of Wilkes-Barre and Pennsylvania's Wyoming Valley, having authored a number of books on Wilkes-Barre and the Wyoming Valley. He also had positions of professor of mathematics and higher English at Wyoming Seminary, auditor of the United States treasury Department, and Captain of the "Wilkes-Barre Fencibles", of the Pennsylvania National Guard, and was admitted to the bar of Luzerne County on May 16, 1876 Other books by Harvey include: A Connecticut town and county in Pennsylvania, 1774-1782 Eighty years of banking in Wilkes-Barre A half-century of progress and prosperity, being a story, by word and by picture, of the birth and growth of the Miner's Bank of Wilkes Barre, Pa. A history of Lodge no. 61, F. and A. M., Wilkesbarr, Pa. A history of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania