Allene Hughes was concerned about her son when she wrote to Lt. Aures, a stockade leader at Dan Beard’s Outdoor School in Pennsylvania. It was the month before World War I erupted in Europe, and young Howard Robard Hughes, Jr. - an only child - was twelve years old.
His mother always worried about him. It was a time - before preventive vaccinations were available - when
infantile paralysis (polio, the infectious disease which paralyzed President Franklin Roosevelt) was spreading among children in America and elsewhere. Ruthie Bie, the girl in the 1941 FDR photograph (with one leg in a brace), was also a polio victim and a March of Dimes poster child.
Howard, a somewhat sickly child, benefited from his summers at the Outdoor School. He would return home in much better condition than when he left. But at camp, Howard was around other children. Other children had germs.
In the summer of 1916, Howard’s father (Howard Robard Hughes, Sr.) wrote to Dan Beard:
I thought these clippings [reporting the rapid spread of infantile paralysis] might be of interest as the clippings show how easily the violent germs are carried even by a well person.
Fear of germs, and what they could do to him, had deep - ultimately paralyzing - roots in Howard’s life.
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