Washington, D.C. physicians were ordered to report all influenza cases and isolate patients
On Oct. 4, 1918, Washington, D.C. physicians were ordered to report all influenza cases and isolate patients. Public…
On Oct. 4, 1918, Washington, D.C. physicians were ordered to report all influenza cases and isolate patients. Public…
By Oct. 4, 1918, physicians in New York reported 999 new influenza cases for the previous 24-hour period,…
On Oct. 4, 1918, New York’s board of health enacted staggered schedules for business operations throughout the city…
On Oct. 4, 1918, Cleveland City Director of Public Welfare Lamar T. Beeman directed Health Commissioner Rockwood to…
On Oct. 4, 1918, Salt Lake City health officials convened to address the small amount of influenza cases…
On Oct. 3, 1918, the Health Officer for Washington, DC, Dr. W.C. Fowler ordered all public gatherings cancelled…
On Oct. 3, 1918, Omaha reported its first influenza outbreak in the region, and the health commissioner ordered…
On Oct. 3, 1918, Cincinnati Health Officer Dr. William H. Peters responded to the influenza threat by enacting…
On Oct. 3, 1918, the Spanish Flu reached Portland, Oregon when Private James McNeese, a young soldier on…
On Oct. 3, 1918, state Health Commissioner Dr. Franklin B. Royer, witnessing the growing epidemic across Pennsylvania, issued…
On Oct. 3, 1918, the Spanish Flu reached the state of Washington when Seattle newspapers reported that one…
On Oct. 2, 1918, the Washington, D.C. school board closed all public schools (which had 50,000 students). The…
On Oct. 2, 1918, Kentucky Secretary of the state Board of Health Dr. Joseph N. McCormack made influenza…
On Oct. 2, 1918, the Massachusetts Department of Health made influenza a reportable disease.
On Oct. 1, 1918, Baltimore city Health Commissioner Dr. John Blake asked streetcars and theaters to increase ventilation…
By Oct. 1, 1918, twenty percent of Kansas City’s army training schools had contracted influenza. Forty-three civilian cases…
By Oct. 1, 1918, influenza had made its way to Jefferson Barracks, just outside St. Louis, and cases…
By Sept. 30, 1918, with 260 cases in Chicago, Health Commissioner Dr. John Dill Robertson ordered isolation of…
On Sept. 30, 1918, Texas health officials first reported that influenza was present in the state. By Oct….
On Sept. 29, 1918, New Orleans newspapers reported the city’s first local influenza death. Anticipating an epidemic, the…
On Sept. 29, 1918, Baltimore’s health department admitted to increasing cases of influenza but it was not yet…
On Sept. 29, 1918, Minneapolis civilian, military, and school officials announced the arrival of the influenza epidemic to…
On Sept. 28, 1918, the Naval Reserve Station at Los Angeles Harbor was placed under quarantine as a…
On Sept. 28, 1918, Philadelphia participated in a large parade of about 200,000 people, which led to a…
On Sep. 27, 1918, a young Denver University student named Blanche Kennedy, died of pneumonia a few days…
On Sept. 27, 1918, Kansas City, Missouri reported its first influenza outbreak cases at two army motor corps…
On Sept. 27, 1918, local Nashville newspapers reported that there were at least a handful of cases within…
By Sept. 27, 1918, influenza cases had arrived in the city of Dallas, prompting Dallas Health Officer Dr….
On Sept. 26, 1918, Washington, D.C. Health Officer Dr. W. C. Fowler warned the public to be cautious…
On Sep. 26, 1918, Boston’s health commissioner Dr. William C. Woodward issued a closure order for theaters, movie…