Atlanta residents learned that nearby soldiers had been placed under quarantine due to the influenza epidemic
On Sept. 18, 1918, Atlanta residents learned that nearby soldiers had been placed under quarantine due to the…
On Sept. 18, 1918, Atlanta residents learned that nearby soldiers had been placed under quarantine due to the…
On Sept. 17, 1918, NYC’s Board of Health made influenza a reportable disease, requiring quarantine for infected patients….
On Sept. 16, 1918, Chicago’s Health Commissioner announced that officials had “the Spanish influenza situation well in hand…
On Sept. 16, 1918, the influenza epidemic arrived in New Orleans, Louisiana when an oil tanker with an…
By Sept. 16, 1918, hundreds of influenza cases existed in the city of Boston, overcrowding hospitals.
On Sept. 12, 1918, following the arrival of a number of ships with influenza-infected passengers, New York Cityï¾’s…
On Sept. 11, 1918, the first civilian influenza cases were reported in Boston. By Sept. 16, there were…
On Sept. 10, 1918, two hundred sick sailors were admitted to the new emergency hospital. Meanwhile, Chelsea Naval…
On Sept. 9, 1918, the Massachusetts National Guard, under the direction of Colonel William H. Brooks, erected a…
On Sept. 8, 1918, influenza arrived in Illinois after sailors at Great Lakes Naval Training Station fell ill.
On Sept. 5, 1918, Dr. John S. Hitchcock, the head of the communicable disease section of the Massachusetts…
On Aug. 28, 1918, influenza had broken out on the Receiving Ship at Boston’s Commonwealth Pier.
On Aug. 11, 1918, the first influenza epidemic cases arrived in New York City with a Norwegian vessel…
On Apr. 4, 1918, the first mention of influenza appeared in a weekly public health report. The report…
By spring 1919, Kansas City had suffered over 11,000 influenza cases and over 2,300 deaths from the epidemic,…
In the summer of 1918, the swine influenza virus first appeared in western Illinois in 1918, where it…
On Nov. 11, 1918, it was reported that influenza cases in Salt Lake City had dwindled enough that…
By the end of 1918, 3.5% of Cleveland’s population had contracted either influenza or developed pneumonia. 3,600 people…
In 1918, the first USDA federal-state grading program for poultry was established.
In 1918, It was estimated that about 500 million people or one-third of the world’s population became infected…
In 1918, Alice C. Evans described the organism that caused undulant fever. Her work hastened the pasteurization of…
In 1918, Geneticist Donald Jones invents the double-cross (the crossing of two single crosses) that moves hybrid corn…
In 1918 Army General Hospital 21, also know as the Fitzsimons Life Science District, became the first medical…
In 1918, Bishop Warren Akin Candler and physician James L. Campbell of the medical school successfully completed of…
In 1918, by the end of the influenza epidemic in Cincinnati, the death toll had reached 1700 from…
In 1918, Innis Steinmetz, became the first woman to enter the medical school, and 30 years later, the…
In 1918, members of the The Medical College of Virginia faculty served from 1918-19 with Dr. Stuart McGuire…
On May 3, 1917, Alaska Territorial Gov. John Strong signed the bill to create the institution now known…
In 1917, Mather H. Neill discovered that scrotal reactions of guinea pigs with “Mexican” typhus (later known as…
In 1917, Stem rust attacked the U.S. wheat crop, destroying more than two million bushels and forcing Herbert…