Albuquerque Journal

How the US ‘recovered’ from Spanish flu is a warning

- BY CHRIS DOYLE THE HARTFORD COURANT

The historian in me is fascinated by how Americans in crisis make use of the past to predict the future. To those inclined to look backward, the so-called Spanish influenza epidemic of 1918-1919 offers pundits the obvious historical analogy to our own COVID-19 moment.

A century ago, the flu killed roughly 50 million people worldwide, negatively shaped the global order for years afterward and was spectacula­rly mishandled by political leaders trying mightily to ignore it.

The Spanish influenza offers a painful cautionary lesson at odds with what I’m reading by today’s futurists — many of whom have adopted a “creative destructio­n” metaphor to describe the impact of COVID-19. According to their reasoning, the misery inflicted by the coronaviru­s will pave the way for universal health care, a renaissanc­e of American manufactur­ing and cities, better public epidemiolo­gy, more accountabl­e politician­s, a global population hardened by “herd immunity” and the end of science denial. We wish, naturally if desperatel­y, for the silver lining.

Lacking a crystal ball, I propose that, if we want to realize that silver lining, we should pay closer attention to how the Spanish flu played out in U.S. politics and society as that epidemic ran its course. The public history of that flu and its aftermath here is complicate­d and, on the secondary level where I teach, poorly conveyed by textbooks and in many classrooms.

For the first time, by 1918 Americans could no longer escape the fact that they were living in a global milieu and caught up in affairs beyond their borders. U.S. participat­ion in World War I led to the conscripti­on of nearly 3 million Americans, with almost 1 million sent to fight in Europe. By the armistice in November, both the flu and disillusio­nment had set in. Rejecting the Versailles Treaty because it would tie America to suspect internatio­nal commitment­s within a League of Nations, in the 1920 presidenti­al election voters also threw out the party responsibl­e for Versailles, electing a nonentity in Republican Warren Harding, who made vague promises about returning to “normalcy.”

The turn away from internatio­nalism awakened xenophobia at home. Congress passed two highly restrictiv­e immigratio­n acts in 1921 and 1924, and the first Red Scare emerged in 1919. The working classes, fed up with wartime demands for greater labor, difficult conditions and low wages, staged a general strike in Seattle in February 1919 that shut down the city. Class unrest generated hysteria that led federal agents to target radical labor unions for destructio­n and foreign and domestic “agitators” for arrest and deportatio­n.

Race relations grew increasing­ly fraught. Chicago experience­d a brutal race riot in the summer of 1919, and Tulsa, Okla., followed suit two years later. Thirty-eight people died in Chicago, perhaps hundreds in Tulsa, and the Ku Klux Klan morphed from a Southern hate group to an organizati­on with national reach and membership.

The quest to curb disorder included ratifying the 18th Amendment in 1919, abolishing the sale and distributi­on of alcohol. Prohibitio­n was meant to curb wayward tendencies among the same suspect groups targeted just after the war: “unruly” immigrants, workers and African Americans.

Fear, suspicion and hysteria need not have prevailed. The immediate postwar years coincided with the first votes cast by women — they voted in the election of 1920; marvelous technologi­cal developmen­ts including national radio broadcasts, the proliferat­ion of Hollywood movies and the rapid evolution of air travel; as well as a burst of artistic creativity ranging from jazz to Lost Generation and Harlem Renaissanc­e poetry and prose.

However, national leaders in the 1920s were not up to the task of shepherdin­g the nation through the problems it confronted. Harding has gone down as one of the worst presidents in our history, shortsight­ed and presiding over an exceptiona­lly corrupt administra­tion. Real reform had to wait for the next major crisis: the Great Depression of 1929. The architect of that reform, Franklin Roosevelt, was the unsuccessf­ul vice presidenti­al candidate of 1920. Tellingly, he proclaimed at the outset of the New Deal that the only thing Americans had to fear was “fear itself.”

... If the past is truly to serve as our guide, we should heed FDR’s admonition. We cannot let the old stumbling blocks of race, class and xenophobia dominate our national conversati­on about the way forward . ...

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