SPANISH FLU:
DEADLIEST DISEASE

STORY CHAPTER LINKS
1. STORY PREFACE
2. WAS IT LIKE SARS?
3. ALBERT MITCHELL GETS SICK
4. TO THE WESTERN FRONT
5. SICK SOLDIERS
6. A DEADLY SECOND WAVE
7. PICTURES OF CHAOS
8. MORE BAD NEWS
9. THE DEAD PROVIDE ANSWERS
10. USED AND RECOMMENDED SOURCES

PREFACE

It was a dreadful business.

Isaac Starr, 3rd year medical student
University of Pennsylvania, 1918


When Edvard Munch, the Norwegian artist, created his famous painting The Scream (in 1893), he had no idea that within twenty-five years half the world’s population would suddenly fall ill. His Death in the Sickroom (1895) and The Dead Mother (1899-1900) were eerily prophetic of terrible times to come.

The prolific artist, whose works are still studied and admired, was among the sick during the pandemic years of 1918-19. The malady was “Spanish Flu” - the deadliest disease in recorded history.

Munch’s Self-Portrait Spanish Influenza (1919) depicts an unwell man, but his Self-Portrait After Spanish Influenza shows the ravages of illness. At least he survived.

Somewhere between 20-40 million others did not.

GO TO CHAPTER 2


 

Author: Carole D. Bos, J.D.