Small pox and the American Revolution

With the USA’s 250th birthday coming up, there has been several books about the American Revolution.for example: The American Revolution: An Intimate History, by Geoffrey Ward and Ken Burns and a new Burns’ documentary. I was particularly interested in the section on smallpox.

Like Covid-19, smallpox was a viral disease and greatly feared.The initial symptoms were similar to the flu, Covid-19 and many other viral diseases: fever, muscle pain, fatigue and headache. Before the distinctive rash erupted, small reddish spots appeared on mucous membranes of the mouth, tongue, and throat. 

The characteristic skin rash form within two days after the reddish spots on the mucous membranes. The rash was formed of pustules with a dot (that became filled with fluid) in the center. These spots scabbed over and then the scabs fell off, usually resulting in scarring. In Murder On Principle, Constable Rouge suffers a case of smallpox and becomes terribly scarred.

The origin of smallpox is unknown although the theory says the virus developed in certain African rodents 60,000 or so years ago. The earliest evidence of human illness dates to the third century BCE with Egyptian mummies It is a lethal disease with a fatality rate for the ordinary kind of about 30 percent. Higher among babies. The Malignant and Hemorrhagic forms are over ninety percent fatal. Occurring in outbreaks, it killed hundreds of thousands, including at least six monarchs in Europe. In the twentieth century it is estimated to have killed 300 million alone. As recently as 1967, 15 million cases occurred worldwide.

During our Revolution, General Washington realized that a. smallpox epidemic would kill many of his troops. Accordingly, he had his soldiers vaccinated against the disease. They used a live virus so the risk of contracting smallpox was a possibility although usually the disease was less severe and less fatal.

In 1796, Edward Jenner discovered that milkmaids who had contracted cowpox, a much less serious disease, did not come down with smallpox. He began a trial and proved that inoculation with cowpox prevented smallpox. The cowpox was safer than the live virus..

Later, the vaccine was made of the killed virus. In Great Britain, Russia, the United States vaccination was practiced. However. My father contracted small pox as a toddler and lived to tell the tale. When he volunteered for the Army during WWII, they tried to vaccinate him but of course it never took because he was already immune.

A concerted global effort a to eradicate smallpox succeeded with the last naturally occurring case in 1977. (The last death was in 1978. A researcher contracted the disease from a research sample.) WHO officially certified the eradication of smallpox in 1980.

Writing during the pandemic

When I think of writing during the recent COVID pandemic, I think of the Charles Dickens quote from A Tale of Two Cities: It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. I read several articles on authors who were struggling because of the stress. Not me. For the first time in my life, probably the only time, I was able to write most of the day. Without interruption. I had complete control of my schedule. The library where I worked, in fact all of the libraries, shut down so no work. Everyone was in quarantine so no picking up the grandkids. The gym was closed. I could really focus on the novel I was writing then – Murder on Principle. It is still one of my favorite Rees and Lydia’s. When I needed a break, I working in the garden or my dog and I went for a walk.

That was the best of times.

The worst came a few months later. The kids went into remote schooling, which I ended up doing with them. Childcare for 40 or more hours a week with three boys who all needed a computer and one on one help. Although my library went to curbside delivery, I did not go back. I couldn’t. I cannot imagine what it was like for mothers, and it was mostly mothers, trying to work from home at the same time they did remote schooling with their kids. I was exhausted by the end of the day and I was doing only that one thing.

Now that the world has opened up, the kids are back in school so no more remote schooling. But everything else has as well and there are so many demands on one’s time. No writers that I know ever has enough time to write. Life keeps interrupting so the struggle to find the time is ongoing.