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In 1918, the world took on against a lethal opponent: the Spanish Flu, saw today as the most extreme pandemic in current history. It contaminated an estimated 500 million individuals internationally and eliminated approximately 50 million.

Simply over 100 years later on, the world is battling a pandemic once again as the coronavirus spreads. While things have actually significantly altered in terms of health care, innovation and culture, some things are eerily similar.

In Tennessee, the health problem, typically referred to as “grip” or “grippe” in newspapers at the time, appears to have come barreling through Nashville in the fall of1918 In simply 4 months, a Nashville physician approximated that 8,000 Tennesseans had passed away due to the fact that of flu problems.

While newspapers focused heavily on World War I and efforts to assist soldiers who were combating abroad, stories about the Spanish Influenza pressed into the narrative as the fatal virus sneaked into towns and cities across the nation.

While “social distancing” wasn’t a term used in 1918, it was certainly being practiced and encouraged.

Companies shuttered, churches closed and extra attention to health was motivated.

Sound familiar?

Faith leaders supported church closures

Faith leaders throughout Nashville adopted a resolution to close houses of worship in October 1918, Nashville Banner archives reveal.

” It was considered best to suspend all church services as a preventive measure versus a more spread of the feared malady,” press reporters composed at the time.

Around 92 churches across Nashville closed at the prompting of the city health department, and with little protest. One pastor composed in The Tennessean that although the closures came at a time when people greatly depended on their faith, it was a required step.

The majority of churches have actually taken a similar stance today amid the coronavirus pandemic, halting services and transitioning to remote worship to protect their parishes.

But some pastors and faith leaders have dissented.

In Harris County, Texas, a group of pastors have filed a lawsuit alleging that their federal rights have been broken due to federal government disturbance.

Dale Walker, who is president of the Tennessee Pastors Network, has openly shared on Facebook his frustration with Gov. Costs Lee, who in March stated that churches that were providing in-person services were “running the risk of people’s lives.”

Walker didn’t agree, comparing the suppressing of in-person worship services to “Big Sibling” on Facebook and grumbling on WZTV that “wicked liquor shops” were still open throughout the pandemic.

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Possible sites include hospitals in rural areas, like Ducktown, and even Music City Center in downtown Nashville.

Casts and ‘cures’ marketed to masses

When a crisis hits, people pitching magic remedies make certain to follow.

At a time when you could purchase cocaine and opium from ads in newspapers, other casts and drugs were pitched as treatments for the Spanish Flu: scotch, laxatives, homemade cough syrups, Vick’s VapoRub and cod liver oil.

When $50,000 worth of illegal whiskey was taken in Tennessee, worth nearly $1 million today, a Nashville judge asked for the confiscated alcohol be sent to close-by hospitals given that popular local physicians spoke of its favorable result on flu patients.

” The most eminent physicians of our city and county have actually written me that whisky is the most successful technique of combatting (the Spanish Flu),” Judge J.D.B. DeBow wrote at the time, according to Nashville Banner archives.

While the coronavirus sweeps the world and individuals are scrambling to get the last package of bathroom tissue, scammers have actually turned up across the nation attempting to capitalize the COVID-19 panic.

President Donald Trump has actually consistently pressed the idea that hydroxychloroquine, a substance abuse to treat malaria, might be a “video game changer” in the race versus the coronavirus. Studies analyzing the drug’s capability to treat the virus have tripled given that he started talking about the medication.

A disgraced Tennessee doctor who lost his license 12 years ago was discovered to be behind a suspicious yellow truck marketing coronavirus testing. A cops report called it “a likely scam.”

Reach Brinley Hineman at [email protected], at 615-278-5164 and on Twitter @brinleyhineman.

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