There are no Crittenden Press newspapers available for the 1918-1919 time period when the Spanish Flu Epidemic was hitting our area so hard. This means that no local history or obituaries are available for us to find out what was happening.
In 1927 another outbreak of Typhoid Fever was hitting the county. Here is an interesting article about it from the Crittenden Press August 1927.
Outbreak
of Typhoid Fever in 1927
In the summer of 1927,
near the southern part of our county in the community and surrounding
area of Frances and Dycusburg an outbreak of typhoid was being
carefully watched and treated by Dr. T. A. Frazer, county health
officer.
From the archives of The
Crittenden Press August of 1927.
Dr. G. H. Buck, member of the State
Board of Health was in Crittenden cooperating with Dr. T. A. Frazer
in the fight against typhoid, a disease that at the present time has
a particularly strong hold on several communities near Marion.
The disease is
especially prevalent around the Caldwell Springs area where already
nearly ten cases have been reported. At least one death in that
section of the county has been attributed directly to that dread
disease.
Dr. Frazer, Dr. Buck and
other physicians have inoculated about one hundred people near
Caldwell Springs with the typhoid serum. Measures to eradicate the
disease are being taken in the stricken territory. These steps are
the destroying of the causes of typhoid as well as the inoculation of
the individuals.
Over a thousand people
in Crittenden County have been vaccinated for typhoid fever within
the past few weeks, most of the vaccinations being made by Dr. T. A.
Frazer, County Health Officer.
The entire student
bodies in five schools of the county have already been vaccinated.
The districts are Caldwell Springs, Boaz, Frances, Owen and Bethel.
The vaccine is administered at the school buildings where Dr. Frazer
is accompanied by Fred McDowell, county school superintendent.
In these districts many
of the parents and other relatives of the school children have also
taken the vaccine.
Employees of five mines
operated by the Franklin Fluorspar Company have been vaccinated, or
are in the process of being vaccinated, all expense being met by
their employers who are also paying for the vaccination of the
families of the employees and the students enrolled in the school
districts in which the mines are located.
The vaccine was
administered to the employees and their families at the Haffaw mines
last year and will not be necessary this year.
The other Franklin mines
and the school districts in which they are located are Mary Belle
Mine, Bethel school, Hodge mine, Owen school, Franklin mine, Siloam
school, Beard mine, and Forest Grove school.
A few of the deaths
caused from the typhoid epidemic were reported to the Press.
Miss Eula Brown,
fifteen-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Brown, of near
Frances, died Thursday August 18, after a short illness of typhoid.
Mrs. Elvin Travis, whose
home was near Caldwell Springs, died Wednesday, August 24, after
several weeks illness of typhoid fever. She was 27 years old.
Surviving are her husband, Elvin Travis and her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Tammell, of Caldwell County.
Mr. T. W. Davenport, 59,
a farmer of the View community, died August 22. Surviving Mr.
Davenport are his wife and two sons, Owen and Ercil and a daughter,
Miss Lucile Davenport.
By the end of the year
the typhoid epidemic was about under control and news of its sickness
and deaths were not heard from the Press news items. School and
community activities were once again back to normal.
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