1893. The year of the Typhus outbreak in Teasdale, Utah that
proved so devastating to my Grandma Stringam’s family.
Back to my Grandma’s journals . . .
“One and a half years after Father died (of dropsy—edema,
according to Wikipedia), our whole family came down with typhoid fever.”
A stark statement that packs such a wallop.
Except for Jane (third eldest child) and Sylvester
(youngest), everyone, Great-Grandmother Williams and six other children, were
stricken. There had been a lot of flooding in their area in September, 1893 and
the family dipped their water out of ditches. It was through this water they
all got the disease.
The two unaffected children were sent to Grandma’s house to
be looked after and the rest tried to nurse each other. Living so far out, help
was hard to find.
And no one else wanted to expose themselves to the disease.
One man, Joseph Stickney, a handyman and a ‘sort-of’ nursing
orderly came by after Great-Grandma was stricken. As did a woman, Mrs. Rust, a
practical nurse, who stayed until after Christmas.
A third helper, cousin Gustavus Noyes, who lived 40 miles
away, came to help. But he “took it and died”.
The eldest sister, Florence was the first to go. She was fifteen.
Florence was a very good scribe and had been told some years earlier in a prayer
that she would assist her father in his work. Her father had died a year and a
half before, so the family always accepted that she had been called home to do
that work.
Two brothers, Gus (second-eldest) and George (fourth)
were gravely ill. Shortly after Florence died, Gus quit breathing. The family
thought he had gone, but after a few minutes, he came around and eventually
recovered.
But George did not. As Gus began to breathe once more,
George slipped quietly away.
In all, three people died, Florence and George and cousin
Gustavus. The disease clung to the household from September till March. All who
recovered were left deaf in one ear, a side-effect (they were told) of the
quinine they used to treat the disease.
Another side-effect was their hair loss. To cover their bald
heads, the family, particularly the girls, wore caps to church and school.
“The boys [there] teased us unmercifully and were
continually jerking the caps off just to see our bald heads. But we lived through it . . .”
And there, in that one statement, is Grandma Stringam’s
stout philosophy of life.
Times were very, very hard indeed: Losing their father, and
in short order, two of the children.
But they lived through
it.
Something I can definitely learn from.
A tough breed.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't have survived!
DeleteThat is a familiar refrain -- I have heard it from both my parents, although they had no deaths in their immediate families. Still, there was poverty and other illness and bad teeth (which sounds like a bad joke but is definitely not meant that way). "But we lived through it" is not something I've really had to say.
ReplyDeleteYour grandma was a strong lady.
Me, either. And I'm so glad she did!
DeleteYes, then you just got on with it. It's not really surprising that people were old at 60.
ReplyDeleteSo true! And thanks for visiting!
DeleteDefinitely a tough breed. With few alternatives. Soldier on - or go under.
ReplyDeleteI don't think I would have made it. I think of people walking across the plains or surviving terrible diseases. I would have been the first to go!
DeleteYes....I think about people I knew who survived the 1918 "Spanish Flu" epidemic (one of them is still alive at age 106). It's interesting that my father was deaf in one ear and survived a childhood sickness. I wonder if it was related to how he was medicated - yes, quinine can cause hearing loss . We take people surviving childbirth, or early childhood years, for granted but, for most of human history, it wasn't that way at all. I see it in visiting historic cemeteries and seeing all the graves of children
ReplyDeleteWhen I see all that could (and did) go wrong, it's a wonder to me that anyone survived!
DeleteEvery time I think that life is getting hard, I stop to think of those who went before us. We have nothing to complain about. Well, we can still complain about those really tough things, such as: 'My truck won't start; my soda went flat...'
ReplyDeleteOh, I don't know. Flat soda is definitely on the same level . . .
DeleteI had no idea typhoid causes hair loss. Sad that so many died, but like your grandma said, tough times, but we lived through it. And that's the important part, they recovered and lived.
ReplyDeleteAmazing people!
Delete