This grew out of my Down Da Road I Go Blog which now has become primarily what I'm doing and music. I was getting so much history in it, I spun this one off and now have World War II and War of 1812 blogs which came off this one. The Blog List below right has all the way too many blogs that I write.
Thursday, April 30, 2020
1918 Influenza in Butler Co., Pa.-- Part 4: Working Together and the "Foreign Population"
Butler County's Red Cross chapter contributed money and resources to combat the epidemic. They published articles in the Butler Eagle with information on prevention and treatment as well as advertisements requesting volunteer nurses. Two local women, Clara Beach and Helen Campbell, worked with the city's health board to recruit volunteers through a county-wide telephone campaign, calling over 400 Butler County residents and recruiting 31 volunteers by the end of the first week.
On October 21, the New Castle News in neighboring Lawrence County reported conditions in Butler County were worse among the "foreign population." Among them were many immigrants coming in from Eastern Europe with no family members to care for them. (See my earlier posts about the mass burial site for the immigrant dead in the county. Click on the Butler County Pa label below to see them.)
Their employers, local industries from the Saxonburg area, buried the dead in a mass grave in Winfield Township. Father O'Callahan, from the St. John Parish in Coylesville, administered the Catholic burial rites for them and commissioned a wooden cross made of railroad ties
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