Flu exhibit at PoCo Heritage Museum
I plan to go forward in time with my MacNeil research but have been finding life very distracting lately. Sometimes world wide events sneak up on you and hit you with a wallop! So, I haven't gotten very far with the MacNeils this week. My thoughts have been straying to current events.
We live in a time when news is disseminated quickly giving us time to prepare for what is coming or not, depending on how our leaders take the news. We can tune into what is happening in real time or access it within hours or days of the latest updates. But what happened in the past? How did our ancestors learn about momentous events that were coming and how did they prepare?
Communication was no where near as instantaneous as it is today when my father was holidaying in the Channel Islands in 1939 when Britain declared war on Germany. I don't know how he received the news on Jersey but as soon as he did, he cut his vacation short and returned home to London. News of this world wide event and speculation about what was to come was wide spread and gave people time to prepare. In my father's case, it gave him time to determine which of the armed services he would volunteer for.
World War II was an event that was well covered so that people could get the latest news through various outlets; the news that their governments wanted to give them, that is. The use of propaganda was widespread. Media coverage had improved from World War I but it was World War I that preceded and, no doubt, aided the spread of what came to be known as the Spanish Flu.
That flu hit while world leaders were distracted by the ongoing conflict. In fact, the misnomer Spanish Flu, was given to the disease because Spain, who was not a combatant in WWI, published news about the affects of the flu in their country, while the combatant countries suppressed news of the flu. Movements of troops helped to spread the flu as did civilian gatherings to raise money for the war effort.
I was wearing my historian hat when researching the 1918 pandemic for part of the story covered in the latest exhibit at PoCo Heritage Museum (currently closed due to social distancing measures). My reading showed that it truly was a world wide event that was poorly managed, although it must be said, there was no real medicine to combat the disease in 1918. But we have had time to practice since then and medicine has made quantum leaps forward.
Medicines on display at the drugstore at Burnaby Village Museum
What surprises me when I do research on my family in this era, is that the flu didn't seem to come into their stories at all. It was like it was a non-event although millions of people were affected. It makes me wonder if there will be anything I can find out about how my family or the places they were living, were changed by the pandemic. I'm itching to do some research on my family's flu experience but that's what always happens. I get distracted by another potential story and leave the one I am working on half done. I better finish the MacNeil research that I started first.
Sources:
Arnold, Catharine. Pandemic 1918: Eyewitness Accounts from
the Greatest Medical Holocaust in Modern History. St. Martin’s Press, 2018.
Spinney, Laura. Pale Rider: The Spanish Flu of 1918 and
how it Changed the World. Jonathan Cape, 2017.