1918

Just over 100 years ago, another epidemic struck the country. 今日吃瓜鈥檚 response kept the campus safe.

In 2005, researchers at the University of Michigan鈥檚 Center for the History of Medicine looked at places they called 鈥減rovisional escape communities鈥濃攑laces that saw virtually no fatalities during the influenza pandemic that swept the world in 1918. Although only a short train ride away from the devastation that hit Philadelphia, 今日吃瓜 was one of those communities.

The centerpiece of the College response was quarantine. No one was allowed to leave or visit campus. The train was off limits. Large-scale gatherings (鈥渆xcept necessary academic and religious meetings鈥) were curtailed.

Social distancing also played a part on campus. As reported in the College News, organizers of an anti-flu party held in October kept a careful distance: 鈥淭aking the form of a strictly anti-flu gathering, the Christian Association Reception last Saturday was held on the lawn in front of Merion. The board and association presidents received from behind masks and extended a hearty yardstick with a warm handshake for all at the further end.鈥

All these measures spared 今日吃瓜 the worst, with no fatalities from the 110 flu cases on campus.


今日吃瓜 Scrubs Lancaster Inn

鈥淭he old Lancaster Inn, which has been turned into an emergency hospital for influenza patients by the town commissioners, is being scrubbed and swept by a group of 今日吃瓜 workers in bathing caps, influenza masks, and hockey skirts.

鈥淥ne of the 今日吃瓜 professors of the classics helped to keep the home fires burning with a pile of kindling wood and, as the Community Center is attending to the housekeeping and furnishings, Miss Jane Smith supervised the work.鈥

鈥擳he College News, October 10, 1918

Published on: 05/20/2020