Early
Health Care Challenges
By
Jill Evans, Administrator of the Stumptown Historical
Society

Hospital at 4th and Spokane ca. 1907 |
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In the days before penicillin,
when inoculations were something new, there were
frequent epidemics and people were in continuous fear of
them.
In 1904 smallpox was most feared, and
for many years there was a 10 foot by 12 foot “pest
house” set up about where the Whitefish Lake Golf course
is today. It was “an awful place” according to those who
remember it, and “lots of money” was paid for drugs for
it by the city. As late as 1917 the city council was
paying bills for antitoxin for the pest house, and in
November, 1917, a proposal to move the pest house to the
old jail was defeated because such a house could not
legally be located within the city limits.
There is a story about one J. Cook from the railroad
camp who became sick in town. The local druggist, W.S.
Dodge, took him to the timber south of town to await the
health officer, who took him to the pest house. It was
pointed out that there was no cause for worry over
contamination or contagion because “his blankets had
been stolen”
In 1904 also, Dick Willoughby, recently of Kalispell,
was found to have a mild case of smallpox and was sent
back to Kalispell. At this time guards were put on the
trails to railroad camps to prevent men from coming to
town or returning to camp pending vaccination. Notices
in large type were posted stating that Whitefish was
under smallpox quarantine. Businessmen of Whitefish put
out denial notices, claiming that “the knockers on the
outside are doing all they can to injure Whitefish” by
the quarantine notices. By a state ruling in 1909 no
more general quarantines were allowed, though signs were
still put on afflicted houses. This move was to spur
protection by vaccination rather than by quarantine. In
December, 1909, there were seven known cases in Columbia
Falls, and the Governor of Montana was investigating
complaints against the non-quarantine ruling. However,
the ruling stood, and with vaccination, fear of the
disease rapidly lessened.
By 1910 during times of known smallpox danger, Whitefish
school children who had no been inoculated were barred
from school. The last serious smallpox “scares” was in
1916, 1921, 1923, and 1935. In June 1923, there were
more than a dozen cases in Whitefish.
Scarlet fever closed the schools at least once in the
early years and again in 1936.
In 1916 there was panic when a leper was discovered in
the Japanese settlement of the town. He was Y. Honda, a
railroad laborer who had lived in Whitefish two or three
years in a shack near the river west of the tracks.
Attempts were made to return him to Japan, but whether
these were successful or not are uncertain. At any rate,
he was removed from Whitefish and consequently
disappeared from the pages of the Pilot.
In 1917, and probably in other years, there were
short-lived scares because of deaths in the state from
spotted fever and infantile paralysis. There were deaths
from infantile paralysis in Whitefish itself, but the
disease did not reach epidemic proportions here.
Tuberculosis was greatly feared throughout all the early
years, and it was considered highly contagious and
generally fatal.
Flu epidemics hit many times, and of course “Spanish
flu” was particularly virulent in 1918 in Whitefish as
over the country. Schools were closed for a protracted
period. For a time so were all churches, saloons,
theatres, and other meeting places. All social
gatherings were cancelled. Articles on methods of
combating flue-handling, nursing, and preventing
it-appeared regularly in newspapers. The Masonic Temple
and the school’s home economics building were used as
stop-gap hospitals. Teachers and others helped with
nursing, among them teachers Ida Murphy, Helen
Stevenson, Tillie C. Thompson, Jessica Reed, and Mable
F. DeWoody, Reverend A. N. Sanford, George Winans, Roy
Koehler, and Mrs. C. M. Martinson.
Twenty-eight persons, the majority young men, died in
Whitefish of flue in just seven weeks in the fall of
1918. Then cases were reported on a single day, November
7.
Other flu epidemics in 1919, 1920, and 1928 were
prepared for thoroughly in advance, but all were much
less serious. In 1920 the Booster Club organized the
town, but though many were ill, only one death was
attributed to flu. The 1928 epidemic was a long
drawn-out affair, lasting through the winter and into
April, when a school field meet was cancelled because of
it, but there were no fatalities. The Pilot of December
14, 1928, highlights a side-issue when it states;
In 1919 thousands of emergency liquor prescriptions were
written (for flue patients), Doctors were besieging O.K.
Nickerson, Assistant Administrator of the District
Prohibition Office in charge of permits in Helena for
increased allowances of liquor. In 1928, however, no
special liquor permits were issued unless the National
Red Cross Director declared it necessary.”
See more of their
story in the Whitefish museum, located in the Train
Depot.
Note: The quoted
material is taken from
Stump Town to Ski Town, by Betty Schafer and
Mable Engelter, written in 1972 and reprinted by the
Stumptown Historical Society in 2003. It is available
for sale in the Whitefish Museum located in the Train
Depot. |