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ebook History of Watertown, Wisconsin
Small Pox
1848
Rock River Pilot, 1847-1848, pg 7
1864
01 06 This loathsome disease is said to be raging to a fearful extent in the neighboring village of Horicon. The report is that several have died of it and that in consequence the schools have been closed. Beaver Dam Argus
05 05 VACCINATION
Small Pox is now prevalent in different portions of the country, and in some places nearby, and one case has recently occurred in this city. It is the duty of all who have never been vaccinated to lose no time in using this simple preventive to shield themselves from the exposure to which all are necessarily liable, even when not aware of the danger. Dr. E. Johnson of this city has now a quantity of fresh and pure vaccine matter, which he will employ for this purpose in the case of all who make application. This is an opportunity which those who have heretofore neglected this safe and easy preventive should now use without delay. WD
07 21 The Small Pox. There is no necessity for any one being badly alarmed, but it might as well be known, to enable those disposed to take precautionary measures, that there are several cases of small pox in this city. When practicable, it is prudent to avoid the localities where it exists and, in addition, to go through the process of inoculation. This ought never to be neglected and it is the duty of parents to see that their children are shielded by all the protection which medical science has furnished against the ravages of this dreaded and once fatal disease. WD
1865
03 09 DISEASE IS NOW PREVAILING
The Small Pox – As this disease is now prevailing
in certain localities in this city and quite a number of cases have already
occurred, some of which have terminated fatally, we think the fact might as
well be known, so that those who are inclined to take precautionary measures
against it can do so. At all events, the
evil will not be any worse for mentioning the fact. If we may judge from the statements we see in
many of the papers, we are as well off as our neighbors. This contagious disease seems to be unusually
prevalent this winter in many parts of the country. It is raging extensively in the city of New
York. Every effort should be made to
prevent its spreading, but with all the care that may be taken, there is always
danger.
1895
CITY PUBLIC HEALTH REPORT
The infectious diseases required by ordinance to be reported to the Commissioner of Public Health are small pox, diphtheria, scarlet fever, and typhoid fever. We had not a single death from any of these, except small pox. This small pox case occurred . . . .
Common Council
Proceedings, Watertown, Wis. / 06 04 1895
Report of the Commissioner of Public Health
To the Honorable, the Mayor and the Common Council of the City of
Watertown
Gentlemen:
I have the
honor to hereby submit my annual report as Commissioner of Public Health of
this city for the year ending of the last day of March 1895. My last report included the time from the 1st
of March to the last day of February, 1894, and for the purpose of making a
comparison between the year previous and the last year I shall refer to the
corresponding periods of the year just past.
During this time there died, according to the death certificates in the
city clerk's office, within the city limits 100 persons, of which 51 were males
and 49 females, a decrease of 20 against the same period of the previous
year. 22 of the deaths occurred in
children under the age of three years.
32 persons died over the age of 65 years, out of this number 22 were
more than 70 years old, 10 were over 80 and one reached the patriarchal age of
96 years.
The
mortality in early childhood and in old age being everywhere and always great,
and more than one half of our deaths falling within those periods we certainly
have a most gratifying record.
The
infectious diseases required by ordinance to be reported to the Commissioner of
Public Health are small pox, diphtheria, scarlet fever, and typhoid fever. We had not a single death from any of these,
except small pox. This small pox case occurred in the 5th ward
and was traceable to direct infection from Chicago. At the very beginning of the case the home of
the patient was strictly quarantined; two guards watched the premises by day
and night and no one was allowed to communicate with the inmates of the house,
except the attending physicians and nurse.
After the death of the patient of the house the contents of the house
were thoroughly disinfected, under personal supervision of the Health
Commissioner. The disease which gained
more or less of a foothold in most cities where it appears did not spread in
our midst, having been stamped out after a single case by the most thorough and
radical methods for the prevention of contagion. This was made possible by the generous
support received by the Health department from the Common Council.
A fact
worthy of consideration is that during the illness of said small pox patient
her children, three or four in number, were all within the same house with her,
but as they had all been successfully vaccinated during the preceding winder
not one of them took the disease. The
husband of the patient was vaccinated in childhood and re-vaccinated after his
wife was taken sick, and he also escaped contagion. In the town of Clyman where this case
originated all inmates of the same house with the patient who were not
vaccinated were taken sick with small pox, and several died. Vaccination is the only safeguard against
this pest lential (sic) disease which, in the days
before vaccination, decimated the population of all countries. The vaccination
orders of the State Board of Health were generally obeyed here during the past
two years.
We had 5
deaths from pneumonia and 3 from bronchitis.
In 17 cases
of death the reports of the attending physicians give tuberculosis (consumption) as the cause. Nearly one sixth of all our deaths are due to
consumption; and consumption is a contagious and in certain degree, a
preventable disease. This is a sad
state of affairs. If small pox had
caused one half as many deaths in our midst every one
would be bent upon stamping out the dread disease, the public would be
thoroughly alarmed and the Health Department be sought for aid. The many deaths from consumption are looked
upon with indifference and accepted with a spirit of resignation, and yet,
consumption is a contagious disease and may to a great extent be
prevented. Relatives and friends who see
their dear ones one after another succumb to this terrible malady say,
"Well they must die of it."
Consumption runs in the family, but they don't know that
"consumption runs in houses" more than in families. A person with a predisposition for
consumption living and sleeping in a house, perhaps in the very bed, in which a
consumptive has lived and died will, in all probability, take the disease,
unless the previous occupant, the tuberculosis patient, has been properly
managed and the house and its contents have been thoroughly disinfected.
The danger
of infection from consumption consists principally in the inhalation of dried
particles of sputum from patients containing the germ of the disease.
Consumptives
should never spit upon the floor or into handkerchiefs, but if possible, the sputum
should be disinfected with a 5 percent solution of carbolic acid or with some
other equally effective germicide.
Another good method is to have the patient spit into rags and burn them
immediately. As long as the sputum
remains moist it does not convey the contagion.
Well people should not sleep with consumptives in the same bed. With these single precautions the danger of
direct infection become very slight. In
all places where the people were taught the importance of caring for the sputa
of patients suffering from consumption and live up to the instructions of
medical authorities a gradual and steady decrease of the disease was
noticed. Though I earnestly called
attention to this two years ago and again last year, no one appears to have
given this matter any serious consideration.
In the year 1892 to 1893 we had out of a total of 128 deaths 10 from
consumption, in the year 1893 to 1894 17 out of 120 deaths were from
consumption, and in the year 1894 to 1895 we reach the number of 17 deaths out
of a total of 100 from consumption, 1/6 of all our deaths.
After a
death of consumption has occurred in a house, though it may have been several
years ago, the whole interior of the dwelling should be properly disinfected
and renovated. In a future communication
I shall explain how this may be effectively done, and anyone
desiring information on this subject may receive the same by calling at the
Health Department.
In my former
reports I called attention to the necessity
of having a public hospital. This
need not be large, nor cost much to keep up.
A small house in a suitable location with a few acres of land
surrounding it might be bought or erected by the city, so that patients might
be received and cared for therein. At
present we have no place for the proper care of the ill and wounded. As far as cleanliness is concerned our city
may be compared favorably with other cities of its size. The orders of the Health Commissioners to
clean up when complaint has been made are generally cheerfully complied with by
those who have offended. All in all there are not many conditions in our midst endangering
the public health, though some private places and alleys should be kept cleaner
and neater. It is well to bear in mind,
however, that not everything that is annoying or unpleasant in a neighborhood
much also be detrimental to the public health, and that it is often times,
therefore, difficult for the Commissioner of Health to interfere.
We are at
present, with our very low death rate of only one percent, without doubt, one
of the most healthful if the THE most beautiful city
in the United States. Let everyone take
pride in keeping his place neat, clean and free from smell, and we will soon
add to our reputation of the most healthful city that of the most attractive. In conclusion I desire to express to his
Honor, the Mayor, the members of the Board of Health and the Common Council my
thanks for their faithful support and for many courtesies shown me during the
past year.
Respectfully submitted,
CARL R. FELD,
M.D.
Commissioner of Public Health
1900
07
06 SMALLPOX AND RED CURTAINS
It
has been found that smallpox patients are least marked when
kept in rooms darkened with red curtains.
Sunlight passing through a red medium looses
its chemical power. It thus prevents smallpox from taking a confluent form.
1901
01 30 PROCLAMATION BY Dr. J. M. SLEICHER
Dr.
J. M. Sleicher, commissioner of public health, has
issued the following proclamation to the people of Watertown:
As
there is one case of smallpox and one case of diphtheria in the city, I would
respectfully ask the public to exercise due caution to prevent the spreading of
these diseases. The weather has been
mild and most favorable for the dissemination of disease. There has been a hearty willingness on the
part of the public to resort to vaccination, but in some other respects
negligence has been shown. I would
enjoin upon all business men the necessity of thoroughly ventilating their
respective places of business and offices right after the close of business
hours, by opening both front and rear doors to admit of a plentiful supply of
fresh air; also to abstain from throwing any waste material about the
premises. I would especially call
attention to the post office, as it is a place
where all kinds of people enter, strangers as well as townspeople; it should be
thoroughly aired twice daily. WR
01 30 CHILDREN VACCINATED
Nearly
90 per cent, of the children attending the public schools have been vaccinated,
in compliance with the orders of the board of education. The parents of a few children objected to
vaccinations, and these were kept from attending school a number of days.
05 23 SMALL-POX CASE
Elmer Buffmire, son of
S. H. Buffmire, 1012 Ninth Street, whose case of
illness was diagnosed by Dr. J. M. Sleicher last
Wednesday as being smallpox, is getting along nicely and is now considered to
be out of danger. The patient is
supposed to have become infected with the contagion at some point in the state
whither his duties as an employee of the Milwaukee Road takes him. His case is of the varioloid form. The customary precautions were taken by the
city health authorities to prevent the spread of the disease, the home being in
strict quarantine. WR
05 10 SMALL-POX PEST HOUSE
Emil Berg and S. Monrean,
attendants at the small-pox pest house in the north eastern part of the city,
were taken down with mild cases of small-pox last week. The tramp ill with the disease there will be
fully recovered in a few days. WG
1907
01
25 Every
possible effort is being made by the health authorities of the city to curb the
small pox at the Northwestern University and confine it to the individual case,
also to prevent its spread in the city. As The Leader announced
yesterday, the university was quarantined yesterday morning and the students
are not permitted to leave the buildings. Health Commissioner C. R.
Feld is taking every precaution to prevent an epidemic and yesterday was in
consultation with Dr. Harper of Madison, secretary of the state board of
health. The health department of the city has ordered a vaccination
of all the students at the school and yesterday afternoon about thirty of them
were vaccinated, while in the evening doctors were at the university completing
the task. Some of the students were opposed to the order and voiced
their objections at a mass meeting of students yesterday afternoon, which
lasted about an hour. It seems, however, that most of the students
have yielded and are “taking their medicine.” There were but two
periods (two hours) of recitations yesterday morning, the same having been
abandoned the balance of the day.
10 25 A well developed case of small pox was detected by Dr. Shinnick yesterday morning the patient being Wm. A. Bleecker, son of Edward Bleecker of Lake Mills, who is residing at the home of George Bleecker, near Hubbleton. The patient was recently employed in Minnesota, where he contracted the disease. Drs. Wyhte, Feld and Hoermann pronounced it a typical case of small pox. The young man suffering the disease is sixteen years of age. The case was at first thought to be a case of ivy poisoning, but the physicians soon made the discovery when the same came to their attention.
Every effort is being made to stamp out the disease. Drs. Shinnick and Feld went to Hubbleton yesterday afternoon and quarantined the home of George Bleecker. Mr. Emil Menzel of Milford, health officer, consulted with the Watertown physicians and in accordance with the state law, quarantined the schools at Hubbleton. It is hoped by the authorities that there will be no further spread and anyone exposed should be vaccinated at once in order to quell the disease in its infancy.
History of Watertown, Wisconsin