Saturday, October 31, 2015

Influenza in Plainfield


Spanish Influenza was a pandemic that hit the whole world in 1918. Traveling with the troops in World War II, it hit Fort Devens in Massachusetts first, then traveled via transportation hubs throughout the country. The Spanish flu killed 50-100 million people worldwide, At its peak, the week of October 12th, 393 people died in New Hampshire alone. The statistics are very misleading, because people died of flu related complications, especially pneumonia, after they had technically recovered from the flu. Often those deaths are not counted as flu fatalities.

Spanish Influenza did hit the Upper Valley. As a rule, Vermont is supposed to have been hit harder than New Hampshire. I decided to focus some research on four towns I have not featured yet: Plainfield, Lebanon, Hartford and Norwich.

In Plainfield, there was an uptick of deaths that seemed to be caused by influenza, but it was an uptick only. In a span of 6 years, 1918 actually had the lowest number of deaths from 1914 to 1922. 1919 had the highest number of deaths, but not by a significant amount. In 1915, 20 people died in Plainfield. In 1916, 18 people died; in 1917, 24 people died; in 1918, 14 people died; in 1919, 24 people died, in 1920, 18; in 1921, 18; and in 1922, 17 people died. Only 2 people died of influenza in 1918, 4 in 1919 and 2 in 1920. I think there were probably a number of deaths, especially in the very rural more isolated areas, that went unreported.

The first person in Plainfield to die from the Spanish flu was Annie Bean, who was a 35 year old farm wife when she died on October 12. She had been sick with the flu for two weeks when she finally died of pericarditis (inflammation of the heart). Annie's husband's name was Clarence, who was a farmer in Meriden. She had two sons, Richard, born in 1904, and Clarence, Jr, born in 1914.

Initial research of Annie and the boys is confusing. Her younger son is listed on Ancestry.com as having been born in Maine, yet Annie never lived in Maine, and she is listed only as having given birth to Clarence, Jr. A close examination of the census records for 1910 tell the story. In 1910, Annie and Clarence had been married for 8 years, and they lived with Clarence's parents, Chauncey and Amelia. Clarence had one brother, Lewis, who never married and also lived with his parents. On the census, Chauncey is listed as the head of household, Clarence is listed as the son, Annie as the daughter-in-law, and Richard as the adopted grandson. This leads one to believe that Clarence adopted Richard. Until the end of his life, Richard's official documents always stated that Clarence and Annie Bean were his parents.

It is sad to view Clarence's World War I draft card on Ancestry.com. You can see the card, with his signature on it, listing Annie Louise Bean as his wife, and verifying that the information he gives on the card is true to the best of his knowledge on September 12, 1918. Exactly one month later, his wife would be dead.

When Annie died, Richard was 14 years old and Clarence was 10. They continued to live in their grandparents' house, and more than likely their grandmother took care of them. It is easy to speculate about a woman whose sons lived with her as adults, and to wonder how she and Annie got along.

Unlike his brother, apparently Clarence was not content to stay single, because he married again four years later, to Clara Smith of Hartford, Vermont. This time, he moved out of his mother's house and rented a house for himself, his new wife, and his son. In 1920, Richard is listed in the census with his father, but in 1930, he was 26 and out on his own.

The second person to die from Spanish Influenza in Plainfield was Clinton Smith, who was the 18 year old son of Juliaetta and Frank Smith. The Smiths were also a farm family, and Clinton was their only child . Although the name Juliaetta was quite common in Cornish and Plainfield, I cannot find any link between this Juliaetta and any of the others. There was even another farmer named Frank married to Julietta in Plainfield, but their last name was True.

Margaret Ross was 17 years old. She was born in Scotland and had lived in Plainfield as a servant for four months. She died in St Luke's Hospital in New York City, after having had influenza for 14 days and pneumonia for 7. She had been in the hospital 7 days when she died. Apparently she was sent home to New York to the hospital when she got sick, and then died there. She was buried in the Plainfield cemetery, though.

                                                                                                    Luella and Walter
Luella Williams was 41 years old when she died after having had Spanish Influenza for 5 days. Walter was her husband and they had been married for 22 years when she died. Luella married Walter when she was 18 and he was 25. Luella had 9 children, 7 boys and 2 girls. Two of the boys died. When she died in 1919, her oldest child was 20 and her youngest was under a year old. In 1900, like Clarence Bean and Annie Bean, Walter, Luella and their infant son, Everett lived with Walter's
parents, Norman and Stella. In 1910, Stella had died and the younger Williams' had added three more children to the household, Erwin, Herbert and Stella ( named after her grandmother). In 1920, Norman is still part of the family, several more children have been born, and two (George and Roger) have died. The last child, an infant at the time of Luella's death, was named after his grandfather. Eva, the youngest girl, was 3 years old when her mother died.

Walter raised all of the kids himself. He never remarried. The kids stayed with him until they were quite old. Norman, the youngest, never married and always lived on the farm. Everett lived with his father until he was 31, then disappears from all record. Erwin married Marion Smith in 1931 and they were divorced by 1935. Herbert had a wife, Beulah, and a daughter Patricia. It seems that they had a happy life. Patricia died very recently. In 1933 Stella married a Wilfred Longwood, who had already been married and divorced. At 19, he married a 14 year old girl who divorced him 3 years later citing extreme cruelty. Stella disappears from the record after her marriage to Wilfred. There are a couple of mentions of a Wilfred Longwood who could be the same person. It would be interesting to speculate, but since I'm not sure, I guess Wilfred and Stella are lost to history. Eva died in Hartland at age 99 in 2014. She is listed in the Hartland vital statistics at Eva Williams-Wolfshire, but I can't find an obituary or any other information.
 
 
My point in writing about these Spanish Influenza victims was to put a face and a story to what seems like dry statistics. Of course, two or three families do not constitute sociological research. However, many articles mention the social disruption the epidemic caused. Frank and Juliaetta Smith lost their only child. Annie Bean left two sons.  Both married unhappily and divorced. Walter Williams raised seven children by himself after Luella died. Of all seven children, only one had a happy marriage. There is some reason to believe that several of the children married people who were sketchy at best, and maybe even violent or criminally ill. Some of the unsettled aspects of their adult lives could have been caused by the traumas caused by the death of their mother, and the difficulties of raising children in a single parent home during the early 1900's. 
 
 
 

Windsor County Court September 1


Kelsey Bennett, DOB 4/7/89, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license, in Hartland on July 4

Justin Lopez, DOB 1/12/92, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license, in Hartford on July 8

Honey Daniels, DOB 5/8/79, pleaded not guilty to a charge of possession of narcotic, in Weathersfield on July 1 You can read more about this charge here: http://weathersfieldvermontnews.blogspot.com/2015/07/possession-of-narcotics.html

William Bussino, DOB 2/10/71, pleaded guilty to a charge of possession of heroin, in Springfield on April 9



Windsor County Crime Online:


Holly Aldrich, age 48 of Springfield:


Nelson Duncan II, age 33, of Bethel:

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Windsor County Court August 25


Candace Dupuis, DOB 4/16/69, pleaded not guilty to charges of simple assault on a law officer, resisting arrest, and DUI 2, in Norwich on August 24

Toni Bauman, DOB ¼/55, pleaded not guilty to charges of her first DUI, and resisting arrest, in Norwich on August 7

Davis Albersharndt, DOB 6/10/91, pleaded not guilty to a charge of growing marijuana, in Cavendish on July 28

Gustavo Chang, DOB 12/1/92, pleaded not guilty to a charge of operating a motor vehicle with gross negligence with serious injury resulting, in Bethel on July 14 You can read more about thi charge here:

Wendy Morris, DOB 7/22/89, pleaded not guilty to a charge of false tokens or false pretenses, in Springfield on June 25

Gabrielle Wain, DOB 4/23/90, pleaded not guilty to charges of DUI drug, alcohol or both, disorderly conduct/language, and resisting arrest in Ludlow on August 9

Peter Ddripchak, DOB 6/15/68, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Bridgewater on August 10

Hugh Gabert, DOB 2/6/76, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Chester on July 10

Paul Lachapelle, DOB 10/10/95, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI in Windsor on July 17

Christoper Burke, DOB 1/17/50, pleaded not guilty to a charge of cultivating marijuana - 2nd offense, and a charge of possession of marijuana, in Ludlow on July 17



Ricky Curtis, DOB 11/27/72, pleaded not guilty to a charge of lewd and lascivious in Springfield on June 21


Scott Tucker, DOB 2/27/72, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Windsor on August 9


Ceagin Darling, DOB 4/25/96, pleaded not guilty to a charge of possession of heroin in Hartford on July 11


Deseree Lemay, DOB 3/11/93, pleaded guilty to a charge of unlawful trespass, in Hartford on July 11


William Brown, DOB 12/29/72, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license, in Ludlow on July 14

Jeffrey Jarvis, DOB 2/3/70, pleaded not guilty to a charge of simple assault, in Weathersfield on June 25

Keith Pratt, DOB 6/21/82, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license, in Norwich on July 14

Wendy Rogers, DOB 10/1/67, pleaded not guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of a crash, in Hartford on January 24

Gary Wright, DOB 3/18/57, pleaded guilty to acharge of driving with a suspended license in Royalton on April 30

Leonard Clark, DOB 11/30/73, pleaded not guilty to a charge of operating suspended and giving false information to a police officer, in Sharon on March 16

Joseph Mailhoit, DOB 3/3/77, pleaded not guilty to a charge of unlawful trespass in Rochester on June 9

Windsor County Crime Online:

Angela Martin, age 34, and Jessica Wood, age 38, of Springfield: http://www.rutlandherald.com/article/20150607/THISJUSTIN/706079933

Bob Smart, age 53; Ricky Bemis, age 28; and Steven Lapre, age 36; of Springfield https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?id=386987994783972&story_fbid=544765282339575








Sunday, October 4, 2015

Windsor County Court August 18


Brady Faulkner DOB 10/24/94, pleaded not guilty to a charge of DUI, in Ludlow on July 8.

Dylan McMahon, DOB 12/15/87, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Hartford on August 1

George Williams, DOB 8/30/60, pleaded not guilty to a charge of cultivating marijuana, inWeathersfield on April 29

Justin Foster, DOB 1/22/85, pleaded not guilty to a charge of lewd and lascivious in Springfield on June 13

Cory White, DOB 2/27/87, pleaded guilty to a charge of heroin possession in Hartford on June 26

Dwight Bundy, DOB 9/22/83, pleaded guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct in Springfield on June 30

Kathy Chander. DOB 5/26/77, pleaded not guilty to a charge of simple assault in Weathersfield on June 20

Tracy Benoit, DOB 5/20/75, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license, in Weathersfield on June 24

Jason Ballou, DOB 10/3/79, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license, in Woodstock on July 2

Jeremiah McMahon, DOB 2/1/80, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Springfield on July 2

Kimberly Kennedy, DOB 12/27/69, pleaded not guilty to a charge of DUI, in Windsor on July 13

Michael Hodgkins, DOB 3/22/85, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license, in Weathersfield on June 23. He was also charged with careless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle in Weathersfield on March 20

Shawn Douglas, DOB 3/7/83, pleaded not guilty to charges of negligent operation of a motor vehicle, in Royalton on July 12

Eleni Howe, DOB 2/16/93, pleaded not guilty to a charge of burglary of an occupied building, in Royalton on June 21

Preston Lyman, DOB 2/23/98, pleaded not guilty to a charges of solicitating for purpose of prostitution, lewdness or assignation, and stalking, in South Royalton on July 2.

Krystal Pelkey, DOB 9/12/86, pleaded not guilty to a charge of retail theft in Ludlow on July 14

Alexander Salgo, DOB 6/23/89, pleaded not guilty to charges of driving with a suspended license, operating to elue, careless or negligent driving, and violation conditions of relase, in Ludlow on June 26


Windsor County Crime Online:

Douglas Sargent, age 45, from Springfield:


Monday, September 28, 2015

Influenza and Undertakers in the Upper Valley


There are plenty of articles on the internet about the Spanish Influenza epidemic of 1918 in Vermont and New Hampshire, but with the exception of the blog “In Times Past” (thank you, Larry Coffin (www.larrycoffin.blogspot.com ), I couldn't find much about how this horrible disease affected the Upper Valley. I decided to do some research on deaths from influenza in four towns that have not been featured here: Plainfield, Lebanon, Norwich and Hartford.

In Plainfield, there was an uptick of deaths that seemed to be caused by influenza, but it was an uptick only. In a span of 6 years, 1918 actually had the lowest number of deaths from 1914 to 1922. 1919 had the highest number of deaths, but not by a significant amount. In 1915, 20 people died in Plainfield. In 1916, 18 people died; in 1917, 24 people died; in 1918, 14 people died; in 1919, 24 people died, in 1920, 18; in 1921, 18; and in 1922, 17 people died. Only 2 people died of influenza in 1918, 4 in 1919 and 2 in 1920. I think there were probably a number of deaths, especially in the very rural more isolated areas, that went unreported.

As I studied the death reports, I noticed some interesting trends. In 1915, not a single resident of Plainfield died at Mary Hitchcock hospital. By 1922, there were many people who died in the hospital. I also noticed that when people died, the undertaker who was in charge of the body was named in each death report, indicating that by the early 20th century, the custom definitely was to have the undertaker come and remove the body.

The embalming and undertaking industry started during the Civil War. Embalming techniques had been around for a while. Medical schools embalmed corpses they intended to use for dissection and instruction in the classroom. (For a story about medical schools and corpses see my November 19th, 2014 posting http://connecticutrivervalley.blogspot.com/2014/11/teaching-medicine-at-dartmouth.html ) When a Civil War soldier from a wealthy family was killed, his family paid to have his body embalmed and shipped home so that they could “see him one last time”. This started the custom of having bodies preserved, so that families could see see their dead beloved “one last time”.

As embalming and open caskets became more popular, funerals moved from the home to the funeral parlor. In earlier times, people died at home, were prepared for burial at home, and went from home to the burial at the graveyard. With more people dying in hospitals, the dead person went from the hospital to the place of embalming.

Embalming bodies was a controversial new custom. Many people thought it was pagan, although there is some precedent set in the new testament about annointing a body with various herbs and wrapping it in linen. The people who did the embalming often were involved in making caskets, and convinced grieving families to spend a lot of money on fancy caskets, preying on their vulnerability during a time of grief. They were accused of taking advantage of Irish and Italian mourning customs by charging poor immigrant families more than they could afford for lavish funerals.

To combat mounting charges of unprofessional conduct and exploitation, the chemical companies that manufactured embalming fluids and equipment conducted schools for licensing embalmers, who were renamed undertakers. These schools licensed undertakers, in an effort to provide some legitimacy to the new profession. Undertakers set aside a portion of their homes, decorated in solem décor, called funeral parlors. The funeral industry countered charges of paganism by saying that open casket funerals were psychologically beneficial to mourners by providing unrefutable finality, in that a corpse in an open casket was solid proof that the person was truly dead.

The undertaker for most of these deaths was C.E. Marston of Lebanon, which indicates that the undertaker travelled from Lebanon to Plainfield to get the dead body and bring it to Lebanon and prepare it for the funeral. C.E. Marston is listed under the Lebanon section of the New Hampshire register of businesses of 1893 as an undertaker and a seller of carpets and draperies. Marston also built coffinsl Most undertakers did not have enough business as undertakers, so they had another business on the side, especially in a small town like Lebanon. Conversely, many people who had specialty businesses took up undertaking as an income supplement because their primary business was not providing a living.. When I was a child, the undertaker in my town had a paint and wallpaper store right next to the funeral parlor.

In July of 1900, C.E. Marston was listed in the New England Telephone Directory, along with a handful of other businesses and private residences in Lebanon. There were also 13 public pay telephones in the Lebanon area. You wonder, who did C.E. Marston call? Who did people call on the pay phones, if so few residences in the Lebanon area had phones?
 

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Windsor County Court July 21


Gary Graham, DOB 10/23/57, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Springfield on July 4

Timothy Schloss, DOB 5/29/58, pleaded not guilty to charges of petit larceny, giving false information to a police officer, and buying, selling, concealing, possessing or receiving stolen property, in Quechee on May 29 You can read more about these charges here: http://vtstatepolice.blogspot.com/2015/05/press-release-15d302209-larceny-stolen.html

Matthew Perry, DOB 6/29/95, pleaded not guilty to charges of eluding a police officer and operating a motor vehicle recklessly and negligently in Hartford on May 17

Sean Lowden, DOB 2/22/87, pleaded not guilty to a charge of retail theft, in Springfield on April 18

Jordan Pfenning, DOB 11/07/92 pleaded not guilty to acharges of possession of narcotics in Weathersfield on January 24

Jenna Kendall, DOB 12/5/92, pleaded not guilty to a charge of her second DUI, in Hartland on June 27

Christopher Burke, DOB 1/17/50, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his second DUI, in Ludlow on June 30

Christopher Jones, DOB 7/23/72, pleaded not guilty to a charge of operating a motor vehicle while his license was suspended, in Chester on June 7

Autumn Pearson, DOB 4/24/88, pleaded not guilty to chages of giving false information to a police officer, and buying, selling, receiving, concealing or possessing stolen property, in Royalton on April 27

Sean Snide, DOB 2/15/72, pleaded guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Springfield on July 2

Devon Wood, DOB 5/29/84, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving a motor vehicle while his license was suspended, in Woodstock on June 8

Travis Barton, DOB 7/4/81, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving a motor vehicle while his license was suspended, in Weathersfield on May 27. He was also charged with driving while suspended in Weathersfield on July 15.

Ryan Millard, DOB 3/15/78, pleaded not guilty to driving a motor vehicle while his license was suspended, in Chester on June 9.

Glenn Duchane, DOB 3 /4/55, pleaded guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana on May 27 in Springfield.

Melissa Garr, DOB 7/13/65, pleaded not guilty to charges of aiding in the commission of a felony, and trafficking crack cocaine. You can read more about these charges here: http://www.vermonttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20150725/NEWS01/707259925/-1/RECREATION13



Windsor County Crime Online:


Devin Hardy, age 16, of Westminster, and Breanna Collins, age 17, of Bellows Falls:



Wayne Johnson, age 38, of Springfield








Monday, September 7, 2015

Influenza in the Upper Valley, 1918


By the beginning of the twentieth century, advances in technology had begun changing many aspects of daily life throughout America. Electric lighting came to the bigger towns in the Upper Valley. More and more often, cars appeared on the roads, not only in the bigger towns by the river, but in the smaller hill towns as well. The medical field, however, was not advancing as fast as some of the other aspects of life, and this was painfully apparent during the Influenza Epidemic of 1918.

By October of 1918, World War I was drawing to a close and the boys in Fort Devens, Massachusetts, who had been waiting to be sent overseas could breathe a sigh of relief. It looked as if the war was ending and they would not have to face death on a battlefield. Little did they know they were about to face a more deadly foe than the Axis soldiers.

In late August, several sailors came down with a respiratory illness that started with a cough, headache and nausea, followed by a rash. They quickly began to struggle for breath, eventually suffocating to death, some within a matter of hours, others after a few days. By August 29th, 58 men had come down with the disease, and were hospitalized at the Chelsea naval hospital. From the hospital, the flu spread from health workers and servicemen throughout Boston and then through Massachusetts.

Fort Devens, in Ayer, was especially hard hit. One doctor has been quoted as saying that they were losing 100 men a day, and special trains were used to carry away the dead. The army began a program of rapid discharge, sending soldiers home quickly. These young men arrived home in the throes of illness, spreading the sickness throughout New England.

The epidemic peaked on October 12 and by that time it had spread to New Hampshire and Vermont. That week, there were 393 deaths in New Hampshire, but the deaths continued until 1919. Influenza caused lingering illnesses like pneumonia and other lung diseases that people continued to die of long after the epidemic had ended, making deaths from the disease underreported. Many people who “survived” influenza remained chronically ill and died several years later of related illnesses. New Hampshire was the least hardest hit of any of the New England states, which is surprising when you think how close it is to Boston, where the sickness originated. Rural areas suffered less than cities did. In New Hampshire, Concord, Manchester and Portsmouth all took it hard, but the city hit the hardest was Berlin.

Vermont was hit harder than New Hampshire, possibly because we had so many soldiers who came home from Fort Devens. 13 percent of the population got the flu and 25 percent of the deaths in 1918 in Vermont were from influenza, which is even more significant when you think that the flu arrived in October. Barre and Montpelier were hardest hit, followed by Burlington. The closest town to the Upper Valley that suffered significant numbers of deaths from the flu was Randolph. Even so, every town experienced some deaths from the epidemic, and by October 4th, state officials issued an order cancelling all public meetings. Schools, colleges, courthouses and churches were closed, and people were encouraged to shop only for necessary items, and if it was necessary to enter a public place, to wear a medical face mask.

Larry Coffin, in his blog “In Times Past” ( http://larrycoffin.blogspot.com/2009/03/influenza-and-other-epidemics.html ) quotes the Journal Opinion on October 4th, 1918, saying that many local businesses in Bradford, including the bank, were closed due to lack of available personnell. The next week, the paper reported on the order from Montpelier cancelling all public meetings, and also that “ The Opinion force is decimated by sickness and otherwise, and the local happenings being confined almost entirely to sickness and death notices, unprecedented in our long years of experience in publishing this paper, is our excuse for lack of local items this week.” One of the “otherwise” situations was the death of the newspaper editor's son, a sailor who had died at a Navy station in Virginia. The young man's funeral was a private ceremony, as were all funerals during the ban on public gatherings.