A blog post by Carmen Doyle
There has been a lot of worry in the news lately
about the flu pandemic. People with coughs or fevers are being urged to stay
home.
Staying healthy has always been a worry. However,
Fort Wayne has experienced much worse illnesses in its history than this season’s
flu. In 1849, then again in 1852 and 1854, Fort Wayne residents suffered from cholera.
By the time the cholera epidemics were through, 600 deaths were reported. According
to the Allen County Health Department’s website, there were two deaths in 2012
from the flu.
The Fort Wayne Board of Health was started in 1842.
When cholera first approached Fort Wayne in 1849, the Board of Health reacted
by authorizing two people as deputies from each of the six wards in the city.
The deputies’ job was to visit any place- not just homes and businesses, but
also yards and alleys- where disease could be spread. The deputies had the
power to remove anybody infected with the disease for the safety of the other inhabitants.
St. Augustine’s Academy, which later became the
Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, was offered as a temporary hospital and
the Sisters of Providence as nurses. The 1849 cholera epidemic lasted only a
few months, from July to October. One undertaker, Louis Peltier, made many of
the coffins, “rough affairs, made hurriedly and from any kind of timber that
could be gotten. The lids were nailed down with heavy wrought iron nails, and
the coffins were hauled to the cemetery on ordinary farm wagons”. Almost as
soon as the 1849 cholera epidemic ended, it seemed as if Fort Wayne had
forgotten about it, according to Charles Beecher, a one-time Fort Wayne Presbyterian
minister and author.
In 1852 and 1854, cholera came back and again the
Sisters of Providence volunteered as nurses. Two of the Sisters died as a
result of nursing cholera victims. A hospital was established at a county farm
and a house at the corner of Calhoun and Berry donated by James Barnett (who
was Sam Hanna’s brother in-law) was also used for cholera sufferers. One
resident many years later recalled watching numerous funerals at the nearby
Methodist church.
Medicine has also improved greatly since the cholera
epidemics. Griswold, in his Pictorial
History of Fort Wayne, describes some of the ways Fort Wayne residents
tried to recover from cholera. One doctor is quoted as recommending, “Tremendous
doses of calomel, the panacea of that age, and cayenne pepper.” (Calomel is a
colorless and tasteless white or brown compound used as a purgative and an
insecticide.) Alcohol was also believed to be a beneficial medicine. Officials
did realize the health risks of wastewater and the value of removing it. (The
latest issue of the Old Fort News contains
an article about the health benefits beer was claimed to have as “water
frequently carried dread disease”.)
The next time somebody complains about how sick they
are with the flu, tell them it could be much worse- it could be cholera!
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