Dark and Terrible Moment: The Spanish Flu Epidemic New Mexico
Dark and Terrible Moment: The Spanish Flu Epidemic New Mexico
Dark and Terrible Moment: The Spanish Flu Epidemic New Mexico
RICHARD MELZER
THE FIRST WORLD WAR was all but over by October 1918. The
Allies' final military drive was about to triumph as 1.2 million
American troops steadily advanced on a twenty-four-mile front in
the Argonne Forest. The Germans were in full retreat. By 26 Oc-
tober Charles G. Dawes could write from Paris tHat peace was
"near at hand."1 Americans were ecstatic. The entire nation awaited
news of the great victory over Kaiser Wilhelm and his hated Ger-
man army.
But while Americans awaited the end of the war overseas, they
were suddenly attacked by a new enemy on their shores. The new
enemy invaded the United States via New York and Boston and
proceeded to sweep across the North American continent with
alarming speed and violent consequences. Twenty-six states were
invaded by the alien force within the first ten days of its attack.
Every state in the Union had been hit by the time Charles Dawes
predicted an end to the conflict in Europe. The enemy indiscrim-
inately struck large cities, remote villages, and numerous military
encampments, leaving as many as 851 victims in one day in New
York City and as many as 4,597 victims in a single week in Phila-
delphia. More than ten times as many Americans were killed by
this savage force as were killed by German bombs and bullets in
the Great War. The country fought gallantly in its weakened state
after months of wartime sacrifice and hard labor, but the enemy
gave no quarter and knew nothing of peace negotiations or armi-
stice. It called for nothing less than an unconditional surrender.
The enemy was the Spanish flu epidemic of 1918. 2
0028-6206/82/0700-0213 $2.40/0
© Regents, University of New Mexico
214 NEW MEXICO HISTORICAL REVIEW 57:3 1982
The disease is "nothing more nor less" than the grippe, the] ournal
argued, and cautioned, do not "allow yourself to be frightened into
your coffin. "12 The arrival of Easterners who came to New Mexico
to escape the disease served only to reenforce this naive view that
calm thoughts and clean air would protect the Southwest. 13
But calm thoughts and clean air could not prevent the inevitable.
Although New Mexico was far from disease-infected seaports like
New York and New Orleans, nothing could stop the overland spread
of the flu. As the Raton Range noted, the Spanish influenza was
highly contagious, and "its advance has always been equal to the
rate and frequency of human travel. "14 Soldiers home on leave,
railroad workers, salesmen, traveling showmen, and, ironically,
even those who came to New Mexico to escape the flu were all
potential germ carriers.
It was in fact purported that Carlsbad and the southeastern por-
tion of the state were first infected by the flu when an out-of-state
circus came to town on 8 October 1918. Several showmen suffered
from the disease, and one owner died of the illness during his
circus's stay in town. The Carlsbad Argus reported that once the
germ had arrived "it spread with almost lightning-like rapidity....
It was not three days before nearly every family and business house
of the city had one or more members down. "15 Learning of this
development, several towns, including Albuquerque and Pecos,
attempted to isolate their communities by "closely scrutinizing every
stranger who happened to get off the train." Those who came from
cities and states already affiicted by the flu were asked to "move
on" despite their strenuous objections. 16
Some towns took additional steps to prevent a more serious
epidemic. On 5 October Albuquerque's city commissioners au-
thorized the local board of health to do everything possible to
contain the flu, including asking medical specialists be brought in
from the East coast, as if these doctors were not already overbur-
dened with flu victims in their hometowns. Stores and banks were
shut down or kept open for only short periods in towns like Clovis,
Roswell, and Gallup. Hampered in this way, business and com-
merce were badly disrupted. 17
Other towns, including Taos and Dawson in the north, attempted
to fight the flu by insisting that every citizen wear a gauze mask
MELZER: SPANISH FLU, 1918 217
over his nose and mouth while in public. Many ridiculed the prac-
tice, saying that it did no good and looked foolish, but no one went
so far as to organize an Anti-Mask League in New Mexico as was
done in San Francisco. As a result, a great deal of the gauze material
previously used to make bandages for the war was now used for
the escalating battle at home. 18
As the number of flu cases began to increase in the second and
third weeks of October, city fathers throughout the state began to
realize that their earlier blase attitude and feeble initial attempts
to deal with the disease had contributed little to the preventipn or
cure of the terrible illness. Forced to take more concerted action,
schools, churches, courthouses, movie theaters, lodges, and dance
halls were closed for the duration of the epidemic in a majority of
towns and, after October 17, in New Mexico as a whole. Identifying
the flu as a "crowd disease," doctors and public health officials
cautioned that the best way to avoid the germ was to avoid crowds. 19
Responding to this warning, political leaders canceled most of
their scheduled rallies for the fall elections. Twenty-two conven-
tionaires had already succumbed to the flu after attending the
Republican state convention in the early days of the campaign. 20
"A political convention," according to the Albuquerque Evening
Herald, "is about as unsafe a kind of public gathering ... as can
be imagined" in the current crisis. 21 The Santa Fe New Mexican
predicted that without political rallies candidates would be forced '. OJ
Alfred W. Crosby, Epidemic and Peace, 1918, p. 65. Courtesy of Crosby and
Greenwood Press.
MELZER: SPANISH FLU, 1918 219
4. Get all of the fresh air, good food and exercise you can.
5. Wash your hands frequently.
6. Avoid the use of sprays, drugs, etc. for preventive purposes.
They do no good and may do harm.
7. To protect your neighbor, cover your mouth and nose when
you cough and sneeze. Cough and sneeze toward the floor
or ground.
8. If you feel sick, when influenza is prevalent, go to bed and
send for a doctor.
9. If you have the disease, stay in bed until entirely well. Pneu-
monia may result from getting up too soon.
10. Help your health officer fight the disease. 23
But the public's nerves were not calmed for long. Some towns,
like Tucumcari, Albuquerque, and Raton, were extremely fortun-:
ate; few of their residents contracted the flu and died. Many other
towns, however, were devastated by the epidemic. By 17 October
the Gallup Independent went so far as to write that "the disease
has taken on such dangerous proportions here as to make it as
serious as the Bubonic Plague." Twelve hundred cases of the flu
and 150 deaths attributed to the disease were reported in the
western municipality by the end of the month. 39 Carpenters worked
day and night to keep up with the demand for coffins. The situation
was even worse in towns like Baldy, where the entire population
of two hundred residents was ill; in Belen, where more than half
the population was stricken; and in San Pedro, where forty-seven
of the small town's fifty citizens were down with the flu. Church
bells mourned the death of a new victim nearly every hour in
Socorro. 40 To make matters worse, New Mexico experienced its
coldest autumn and winter in more than twenty-five years as tem-
peratures dropped to as low as thirty below. 41
A majority of New Mexicans lost at least one family member or
friend to the disease. 42 The fear and anxiety of the period was best
reflected in a rather primitive poem that appeared in the Raton
Range:
The flu has got my nanny;
I'm skeered as skeered can be;
If I meet a guy a-sneezin'
I just quiver like a tree.
I've had three shots of serum,
And I'm wearin' of the mask,
But if I hear the people coughin'
I fairly hustle for the flask. ..
I've lined out several boxes
For victims of the flu,
And you bet your bottom dollar
It makes a fellow blue....
So if there is a remedy
That overlooked have I,
Please give it me most quickly,
For I do not want to die. 43
222 NEW MEXICO HISTORICAL REVIEW 57:3 1982
The flu germ spread quickly among the Mexicans and, as a result,
among the residents of the communities they visited in New Mex-
ico. The experience of Dawson, New Mexico, provides a tragic
example. Mexican nationals from the southern portion of New Mex-
ico and the northern region of old Mexico had been recruited to
work in the Phelps Dodge coal camp. 53 Crowded into small tem-
porary quarters, the migrants were particularly susceptible to the
spread of disease. Many died soon after their arrival in town. Daw-
son's' hospital, rescue station, and opera house were filled with
victims of the dreaded disease. School teachers served as nurses
in the camp's boarding houses where many unmarried male im-
migrants resided. Those who were well enough drove the sick in
ambulances to the hospital or the dead in flatbed wagons to the
cemetery. Seven or eight bodies were loaded on each wagon as the
dead were buried in mass graves dug by members of their own
families. Phelps Dodge officials closed Dawson's schools for six
weeks, shut down its business district for extended periods, re-
quired employees to wear masks in public, and kept four company
doctors on twenty-four-hour call, but to no avail. 54 The company's
annual report for 1918 counted seventy-nine flu fatalities in the
small town. 55 With an estimated population of six thousand, this
conservative figure meant that 13.2 individuals out of every thou-
sand in camp died of the flu that fall. Only New York's 10.4 per
thousand and Pittsburgh's 10.0 per thousand came anywhere near
this average among the forty-six American cities listed in Alfred
Crosby's general history of the epidemic in the United States. 56
Having lost two of its residents in combat overseas, Dawson lost
at least forty times that number to the flu at home. This great
tragedy can not be blamed on the Mexican migration alone, but
probably the death toll would not have been as great in the isolated
coal camp if germ carriers had not been haphazardly recruited from
flu infected regions of the Southwest.
Unfortunately, Dawson's tragedy was typical of many other small
towns in New Mexico. Rural New Mexico was hit far worse than
the state's larger urban centers, despite a contrary trend in the
United States. 57 The Reverend E. J. Waltz could therefore report
that in rural Chilili "there was not a single home where there were
less than two sick and many times the number reached seven or
eight. In one home we found eight children lying on the bare floor.
224 NEW MEXICO HISTORICAL REVIEW 57:3 1982
Three of these were dead and the others were so sick they were
entirely helpless." Mass graves were dug outside the village, but
Waltz still discovered corpses lying above ground "for want of a
burial place. "58
More urban centers, like Raton and Albuquerque, provide good
counter-examples to tragedy-ridden rural villages like Dawson and
Chilili. In Raton, only 1.2 deaths were reported per thousand
citizens compared to nearby Dawson's alarming 13.2 per thou-
sand. 59 Albuquerque also fared much better than the remainder of
Bernalillo County; by the end of November the flu had claimed
almost twice as many victims in the county as it did in the city.
Albuquerque's hospitals had, nevertheless, been full since 7 Oc-
tober. 60 The total number of influenza cases doubled (from 75 to
159) by 10 October and tripled (fro~ 159 to 480) by 19 October
(see Table 1). Despite this rapid increase in the number of cases
reported, city leaders continued their earlier efforts to prevent the
spread of panic and fear by remaining overtly optimistic. The Eve-
ning Tribune stressed that "fear and unpreparedness" were the
major causes of the flu. Having "conquered" fear and prepared for
the worst, the newspaper's editors declared that the situation in
Albuquerque was "well under control" by 9 October. 61
Taking more concrete steps to fight the flu, city leaders banned
public meetings, discouraged coughing and sneezing in crowds,
and insisted on placards to distinguish quarantined homes. 62 Classes
at the University of New Mexico were cancelled indefinitely, and
the Chamber of Commerce's Bureau of Charity raised a thousand
dollars to help needy families stricken by the flu. 63 Also, city leaders
exercised extreme caution in deciding when to lift Albuquerque's
ban on public indoor meetings; the city did not want to repeat
Denver's on-again, off-again ban that served only to facilitate the
spread of the flu. Despite the pressure applied by those who could
profit from an early lifting of the ban, Albuquerque's city commis-
sioners maintained their quarantine until 2 December, three weeks
after most other cities in the state had chosen to lift bans on public
gatherings. 64 Combining caution with at least outward calm, Al-
buquerque survived the epidemic better than did most other cities
of a similar size in the nation. 65
The number of flu cases and deaths varied, then, from towns
MELZER: SPANISH FLU, 1918 225
Cumulative Cumulative
Number of Number of
Cumulative Dead from Cumulative Dead from
Number of the Flu or Number of the Flu or
Flu Cases in Pneumonia in Flu Cases in Pneumonia in
N.M. N.M. Albuquerque Albuquerque
October 7 23
8 75
9 100
10 159
11
12 180
13
14
15
16
17
18 460
19 7,371 237 480 69
20 7,477 248 79
21 . 7,565 280 500 85
22 8,525 335 550
23 9,241 410 573
24 10,199 456
25 10,613 540
26 10,893 567 91
27 11,674 599
28 12,101 683
29 12,976 777
30 13,650 854
31 14,344 918
November 1 15,007 1,009
2 15,255 1,055
3
4
5
6 923 167
*Estimated Total New Mexico Population, September 1918 = 350,000.
Sources: J. W. Kerr to City and County Health Officers, East Las Vegas, New Mexico, 4
November 1918, Lindsey Papers; Albuquerque Journal, 7 October 1918; Santa Fe New
Mexican, 12 October 1918; Ft. Sumner Review, 23 November 1918; Las Vegas Optic, 9
November 1918.
226 NEW MEXICO HISTORICAL REVIEW 57:3 1982
like Dawson, with its large immigrant population and high fatality
rate, to places like the Los Alamos Boys' Ranch, with its very young
population and its record of no deaths during the flu epidemic. 66
Factors including age, crowded conditions, under-nourishment from
a wartime diet, physical exhaustion, ethnic origin, and poor health
facilities contributed to the spread of this "silent foe" in the state.
Any combination of two or more of these factors spelled almost
certain disaster to the residents of many communities. The absence
of these factors, on the other hand, meant a far easier time for
many New Mexico towns in the months of October and November.
The flu epidemic of 1918 would have been terrible during any
period of history, but its impact on the course of historical events
was even greater because it struck at a critical moment in the
concluding hours of World War I. With thousands ill from the flu,
work in the nation's shipyards and vital munition factories was
sharply curtailed, while the production of coal was "seriously ham-
pered." The disease decimated military camps in the United States,
transport ships bound for Europe, and combat troops on the front
lines of battle. 67 Its death toll among American soldiers was "without
parallel in army annals. "68 Forty-one of the ninety-four New Mexico
troops killed in the war in fact died from the flu or of other disease
rather than from combat injuries suffered abroad. 69
This "great and terrifying menace" also crippled the war effort
in New Mexico. Draft calls were suspended for the first three weeks
of October as civilian doctors could not be spared to examine in-
coming troops. 70 The drafting of 405 additional males was delayed,
although 7,551 New Mexicans continued to serve in the Army as
of 1 November. 71 War bond campaigns were also affected by the
epidemic, although most of the funds collected in the Fourth Lib-
erty Bond drive had already been raised before the worst days of
the epidemic. Towns like Dawson could; therefore, claim to have
exceeded their campaign goals by as much as 300 percent, despite
the flu and despite the news that the war was almost over in
Europe. 72 Open-air rallies, door-to-door canvassing, and Liberty
Bond parades, however, helped spread the disease. As Crosby
argues, the flu virus was "such an adept traveler that it really didn't
need the help," but it took full advantage of bond drives and pa-
MELZER: SPANISH FLU, 1918 227
triotic rallies to make itself even more dangerous and more wide-
spread. 73
Thousands of manpower hours were, moreover, lost just when
the war demanded maximum efficiency and productivity from all
citizens. Estimating that 400,000 Americans had died in the epi-
demic and that each would have worked an average of twenty-five
additional years if he had lived, Henry Moir told the Association
of Life Insurance Presidents that the epidemic had caused "an
economic waste of ten million years" for the United States. 74 Ap-
plying this formula to New Mexico, where approximately five thou-
sand people died, the state could claim to have suffered an economic
loss of 125,000 years.
As a result of this terrible loss and other wartime hardships,
many New Mexico counties experienced acute shortages in essen-
tial supplies. Otero County, for example, reported a supply of only
twenty tons of coal, little food, and absolutely no surplus wool for
ten thousand people facing a winter of sub-zero temperatures.
Other counties were hit equally as hard; few could hope to ward
off an epidemic, much less contribute more to the war effort under
such adverse conditions. 75
On another front, New Mexico's largest military encampment,
Camp Cody, was hit by the flu, although it weathered the epidemic
far better than most forts in the country.76 Quarantined as early as
4 October, the camp reported 500 cases of the flu and 125 cases
of pneumonia, but only 21 dead among its 4000 troops prior to 23
October. 77 These figures skyrocketed, however, when 4,200 new
troops entered the southern camp in the succeeding 2 weeks; 2,237
new cases of the flu, 431 new cases of pneumonia, and 107 addi-
tional deaths were listed in these 14 days alone. 78 From an average
of approximately 5 deaths per thousand soldiers in the first 3 weeks
of October, Camp Cody experienced 13 deaths per 1000 soldiers
in the last week of October and the first week of November. Al-
though Camp Cody was not hit as hard as other forts, it became
the target of rumors exaggerating the extent of the epidemic and
the number of fatalities. When it was rumored that 50 percent of
the troops were seriously ill with the flu, with hundreds of the men
"dropping like flies" each week, the camp's commander, Brig. Gen.
228 NEW MEXICO HISTORICAL REVIEW 57:3 1982
When the sun rose on a perfect day, the town went mad. Sane and
ordinarily sedate men and women rushed about the streets, shout-
ing, laughing, crying, beating each other on the back, waving flags .
. . . Every motor horn in town needed throat medicine before the
forenoon was half done, and each car, truck, wagon and horse was
decorated with the national colors of the Allies and these United
States. 83
and village of the state. 84 The war was over. The flu was largely
conquered. The gloom had lifted. It was time to live again.
While the end of the flu epidemic produced joyous celebrations,
it also created great controversies in New Mexico. Not the least of
these controversies involved the state's poor medical health facil-
ities. New Mexicans severely criticized state medical authorities
for their disorganization and general unpreparedness in dealing
with the recent epidemic. Mter the flu had "raged for months in
Europe," the Santa Fe New Mexican insisted, in retrospect, that
local medical authorities should have realized that the disease was
"bound to visit these shores in the course oftime. "85 Although ample
opportunity occurred to organize and prepare for the onslaught of
the flu, the New Mexico Public Health Association declared in
December 1918 that "the outstanding feature of the situation was
our absolute lack of health preparedness." The Public Health As-
sociation went on to explain that the State Board of Health was
"powerless to act when the epidemic struck us" because the board's
seven members
The state had had to rely on the Rocky Mountain Division of the
International Red Cross and on Dr. J. W. Kerr of the U.S. Public
Health Service to coordinate the sending of medical personnel and
vital supplies to stricken communities. Fortunately, Dr. Kerr was
well aware of the state's public health problems because he had
completed a survey of public health conditions in New Mexico just
prior to this epidemic. Ironically, Kerr had concluded his survey
of September by stating that such an organization or state depart-
ment of health was "essential and urgently needed."87 As the Public
Health Association lamented in proposing the creation of this agency,
"we will never know how many . . . friends, relatives, and fellow
230 NEW MEXICO HISTORICAL REVIEW 57:3 1982
NOTES
9. David M. Kennedy, Over Here: The First World War and American Society
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1980), pp. 189n, 198.
10. General histories on the flu include Crosby, 1918; Hoehling, Great Epi-
demic, and Richard Collier, The Plague of the Spanish Land: The Influenza Pan-
demic of 1918-1919 (New York: Atheneum, 1974). Dissertations include Noyes,
"Misplaced Chapter" and Pettit, "Cruel Wind." Articles and bookchapters include
Persico, "Epidemic"; Ross, "Plague"; Alfred W. Crosby, Jr., "The Influenza Pan-
demic of 1918" in History, Science, and Politics: Influenza in America, 1918-1976,
ed. June E. Osborn (New York: Prodist, 1977), pp. 5-13; and Chapter 30 ofEdward
Robb Ellis, Echoes of Distant Thunder: Life in the United States, 1914-18 (New
York: Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1975), pp. 462-77:
11. Santa Fe New Mexican, 28 September 1918.
12. Albuquerque Journal, 8 October 1918.
13. Santa Fe New Mexican, 18 October 1918. New Mexico had, of course, been
known as a health haven for years. It was estimated in 1918 that 60 percent of
all Anglos in the state "are there or came there originally for the health of some
member of their family" a. W. Kerr, "Public Health Administration in New Mex-
ico," Washington E. Lindsey Papers, New Mexico State Records Center and
Archives [SRCA], Santa Fe).
14. Raton Range, 18 October 1918.
15. Carlsbad Argus, 11 October 1918.
16. Carlsbad Argus, 8 November 1918; Albuquerque Journal, 5 October 1918.
17. Santa Fe New Mexican, 11, 18 October 1918.
18. Las Vegas Optic, 9 November 1918; Santa Fe New Mexican; 12 December
1918; interview with Donald Gibbs, 25 October 1978; interview with Grace M.
Beddow, 12 August 1978; interview with N. H. Black, 5 August 1978; interview
with William Saul, 21 October 1978.
19. Deming Graphic, 4, 25 October 1918; Santa Fe New Mexican, 5, 11, 15,
18 October 1918; Gallup Independent, 28 November 1918; Albuquerque Journal,
7, 16 October 1918; Raton Range, 29 November 1918; Carlsbad Argus, 11, 18
October 1918; Ft. Sumner Review, 26 October 1918; Albuquerque Evening Her-
ald, 5, 12, 18 October 1918.
20. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 29 October 1918.
21. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 18 October 1918.
22. Santa Fe New Mexican, 18 October 1918.
23. Raton Range, 24 October 1918.
24. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 26 October, 23 November 1918; Santa Fe
New Mexican, 9 October 1918.
25. Carlsbad Argus, 11 October 1918; Gallup Independent, 10 October 1918;
Deming Graphic, 11 October 1918; Santa Fe New Mexican, 28 September 1918.
26. J. W. Kerr to Gov. Washington E. Lindsey, East Las Vegas, New Mexico,
6 November 1918, Lindsey Papers, SRCA; Carlsbad Argus, 11, 18 October 1918;
Santa Fe New Mexican, 12, 21 October 1918; Gallup Independent, 24 October
1918.
234 NEW MEXICO HISTORICAL REVIEW 57:3 1982
September 1978; interview with Hannah McGarvey, 13 June 1978; interview with
Lloyd Lumsden, 8 July 1978; interview with Black; Albuquerque Evening Herald,
5 November 1918.
55. Phelps Dodge Corporation, Annual Report, 1918, p. 33. Annual Report
available to the author courtesy of the Phelps Dodge Corporation.
56. Crosby, 1918, pp. 60-61.
57. J. W. Kerr, Memorandum to the State Board of Health, East Las Vegas, 1
November 1918, Lindsey Papers, SRCA.
58. Quoted in the Albuquerque Evening Herald, 12 December 1918.
59. Raton Range, 12 November 1918.
60. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 7, 22 October, 27 November 1918.
61. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 9 October 1918.
62. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 26 October 1918.
63. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 5, 17 October, 2 November 1918.
64. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 23 November 1918.
65. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 6 November 1918.
66. Ft. Sumner Review, 30 November 1918.
67. "Pushing the War Activities at Home," Current History 9 (November 1918):
239; "Emerging from War Conditions," Current History 9 (March 1919): 465;
Noyes, "Misplaced Chapter," pp. 25-26,212-14,238-39; Persico, "Epidemic,"
p. 82; Hoehling, Great Epidemic, pp. 151-59; Crosby, 1918, pp. 121-201; Pettit,
"Cruel Wind," pp. 96-99, 101-8, 114-15, 126-28, 166.
68. New York Times, 26 January 1919.
69. Ft. Sumner Review, 2 November 1918.
70. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 21 October 1918; Carlsbad Argus, 1 No-
vember 1918; Santa Fe New Mexican, 21 October 1918.
71. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 17 October 1918.
72. Raton Range, 25 October 1918.
73. Crosby, 1918, p. 53.
74. New York Times, 6 December 1918.
75. Santa Fe New Mexican, 27 December 1918.
76. Albuquerque Evening Herald, 20 September 1918; Hoehling, Great Epi-
demic, p. 149.
77. Deming Graphic, 8 November 1918; Santa Fe New Mexican, 5 October
1918.
79. Quoted in Deming Graphic, 8 November 1918.
80. Deming Graphic, 4 October 1918.
81. New York Times, 24 October 1918. Edward Ellis nevertheless writes of the
Germans' successful attempt to inject American horses and mules with glanders-
causing germs. A contagious and fatal disease, glanders killed thousands of horses
and mules intended for shipment to the Allies in Europe (Ellis, Echoes, p. 179).
82. Ft. Sumner Review, 9 November 1918. Other "theories" involving wartime
sugar rationing, toxic vapor, cosmic rays, and the distemper. of dogs and cats are
236 NEW MEXICO HISTORICAL REVIEW 57:3 1982