Pandemics Progress and Prejudice a Historians Perspective

[Music]

we are in a pandemic

and pandemics are something i know about

a public historian and

author i’ve researched and written about

pandemics

but this isn’t history this is now and

when

covet hit i was as unprepared as most

people

and yet uh people began to ask me

questions

how did st louis get through this in the

past how were things

different when it was all over

obviously we know such so much more now

than we did back then and that’s because

uh our ancestors had a will to survive

and a hope for a better life they

pivoted

they were motivated to change the world

and find answers and solutions

in january of 1849 the second

cholera pandemic reached st louis

and when it arrived st louis was

filthy and overcrowded it was

a jumble of pioneers preparing to head

west

it was irish immigrants escaping the

potato famine

and germans fleeing political turmoil in

europe

every day dozens of steamboats arrived

and from them people packed the unpaved

streets

which were a revolting mess of

mud and animal waste it was not a

pleasant place

colorado was the great scourge of the

19th century

and people were terrified of it

and that’s because they knew that if

they contracted it they had about a 50

50

chance of survival

imagine being the grigg family

they were irish immigrants who lived on

green street

near the light they endured

crippling poverty and open contempt

from many saint louises who viewed them

and most immigrants as

unwelcome strangers when

the pandemic hit their

already difficult life turned tragic

on june 19 1849

their eldest son thomas fell ill

and quickly died then

over the course of the next four days

cholera took each of their remaining

children

william nine richard seven benjamin

five and mary h4

finally on june 24th

margaret herself succumbed leaving only

her husband john

out of a family of seven cholera ravaged

the city

just like it did the great family and

in the end it took the lives of nearly

10

percent of st louis’s population of 80

000

but the griggs and thousands like them

were victims

of not just the disease but of the

conditions and

attitudes that fostered it

we cannot deny that the cholera pandemic

in st

louis was a horrifying event

but we cannot deny that the pandemic was

also a force of change

an impetus to improve life and

an engine of progress

today when people ask me questions they

are looking to the past for

reassurance and silver linings

i certainly don’t have all the answers

but i know this

we can look at history and see

that with the passing of each pandemic

the world has emerged in a much better

place

in 1849 a committee for public health

had

unprecedented powers to clean up the

city

they immediately enacted new public

health measures such as trash

removal services sanitation ordinances

and providing everyone

access to cleaner water

the committee then took another

important step when it

established a quarantine station on an

island

in the mississippi river on quarantine

island

a hospital complex was built and

steamboats were stopped and inspected

for cholera

when cases were discovered patients were

quarantined

thus of course reduced the number of

cases entering the city

and it lowered the mortality rate after

the pandemic

the committee continued to influence the

development of saint louis

chateau’s pond a dangerous reservoir of

polluted water that sat near the present

location of

union station was drained

new sewer systems were built and the

water supply system was upgraded

st louis changed for the better

however it wasn’t just st louis the

change

the cholera pandemic also changed the

world

over in london dr jon snow developed a

theory that cholera was linked to

contaminated water

he collected data and plotted colorist

cases

on a map to show their proximity to

wells

snow noted that the areas in the city

where the cholera deaths were highest

correlated to areas with polluted water

he convinced city officials to allow him

to

close a public water source by removing

a pump handle

and almost immediately cases began to

drop

it was later determined that that

particular pump was only three feet

from an old privy today snow is

considered the father of modern

epidemiology

his conclusions led scientists like

robert cope

towards research that verified that

bacteria caused disease

later others continued this line of

research and prove the existence of

viruses

and the discovery of penicillin

following the 1918

spanish flu candidate

everything i’ve described required

change

and people had to embrace that

and there are always those who oppose

change it was a problem in 1849

just as it is today and sadly for many

of the same reasons despite the passage

of 170 years

during the cholera pandemic defying

change for some was simply a refusal to

depart from old ways and practices

no matter how arcane they might have

been

fear and mistrust stemming from racism

and bigotry

also stood in the way of change many saw

the pandemic as a result

of personal behavior immigrants and free

persons of color were

seen as intemperate promiscuous dirty

and unintelligent

these attitudes influenced the way in

which some doctors advocated for new

preventive measures

when cholera first arrived in saint

louis some physicians

even pointed to the consumption of

sauerkraut

and beer as its cause

this eventually resulted in the pandemic

banning these foods

which furthered the belief that

immigrant communities were at the heart

of the epidemic

unfortunately today there are still

people trying to put a face on an

invisible enemy

racist attacks have risen as much as 40

percent

against members of the asian community

but some have accused

china of starting the pandering

furthermore

poverty and inequality still plague our

health care system

data shows that while african americans

comprise

just 13 of the american population

they’ve accounted for 30 of covet

victims

so 170 years may separate us from 1849

but

intolerance denial and ignorance based

on fear and misinformation

is still sadly alive and well so like

the virus itself these roadblocks must

be overcome

this is what i know

on history i have no doubt that science

and even greater medical advancements

will prevail

the question is will humanity follow

the answer is up to all of us but i

leave you with some hope that this

pandemic could lead towards an even

brighter future

a poll conducted in 13 countries across

the world

by the social progress imperative found

that

seven in ten people believe that after

this pandemic

government should focus on social

progress

over economic growth as a means of

improving the world

that’s a sign that people across the

planet are hoping for real change

so this time when this pandemic two

has passed perhaps both science

and meaningful social change will

prevail

thank you