"He'll Come Home in a Box": The Spanish Influenza of 1918 Comes to Montana
| Rating: | |
| Total Rates: | 1 |
| Rate item | |
| Type: | Library or Collection |
| Grade Level: | Secondary, Post-secondary |
Abstract: In 1918 and 1919, the Spanish influenza killed 550,000 people in the United States and 20 to 40 million worldwide. In a 1982 interview with Laurie Mercier, Loretta Jarussi of Bearcreek, Montana, described how people would pass through that tiny town seemingly healthy, only to be reported dead two days later. Her father went undiagnosed for many weeks and had plans to go to a nearby hot springs to rest. She believed that her father's death was averted only because the son of the local doctor was an army doctor who recognized flu symptoms that others missed.
Details
Conditions of Use: No License
Reviews
- How did you use this material?
I'm planning to introduce Avian Flu and wanted to revisit the 1918 pandemic. This oral history will provide an entry point to the topic.
- Did you augment the material?
Yes, I'm using mortality data on influenza for 1917-1919 as well as the biology of the H1N1 virus. Other oral hstories from the Center for History and New Media/American Social History Project are used to introduce the topic. An interactive flu map from Weather Underground is another resource.
- In which courses or programs did you use the material?
Faculty workshop on interdisciplinary problem solving
- How would you recommend using this material?
This is an excellent resource for introducing biology students to the interdisciplinary nature of contemporary problems such as Avian Flu.
- What knowledge and skills do you need?
Instructor should be prepared to provide student access to resources such as the internet to explore their own questions regarding the Spanish flu. If these are biology students, connecting relevant text material on influenza helps. Students benefit from working in groups.
- Is the material appropriate?
This very human account serves as an impetus for undergraduates to consider more broadly the impact of pandemics.
- Did using the material lead to successful or identifiable outcomes?
Yes, the use of oral history is now being considered as a resource by science faculty members.
