Category Archives: Health Care

Yellow fever epidemic of 1878: New Orleans

(Passages from the Provincial Annals of 1878 used with permission of the Daughters of Charity Provincial Archives)
During the 19th century the Daughters of Charity witnessed not only the Civil War but also outbreaks of diseases such as cholera and yellow fever in cities where they were serving. The Provincial Annals of 1878 record the Sisters’ experiences during an outbreak of yellow fever that occurred in a number of Southern cities.

The Annals’ first mention of the outbreak was in July of 1878, in New Orleans.

In the latter part of July the city was thrown into quarantine, the last passenger train on the Mobile and Orleans Rail Road leaving it on the evening of the 29th. Four Thousand tickets were sold at the two principal depots of the city this day. From this time the inhabitants were literally shut in the city. Did they attempt to leave it, they quickly found themselves in the custody of some health officer belonging to a neighboring city as yet unvisited by the plague. Supplies went liberally, the generous contributions of the whole country and freight trains ran into the city; as for passenger trains there was no one who wished to go. Engines came forth at intervals, received and transmitted the mails and then returned. In the streets, doctors’ buggies and funeral processions were the principal objects to be seen; all the throngs of fashionably dressed people had been swept away. The sun was scorching. Its rays were considered peculiarly dangerous. The people save from stern necessity stayed at home.

The first appearance of the epidemic in our houses was at St. Simeon’s School three of the
Sisters were prostrated at once. One Sister Loyola Lawler, died on the sixth day. These cases were quickly succeeded by three others. In the absence of the Sister Servant, detained from home. This was indeed a house of desolation and distress. It was in the beginning of the epidemic, in the first bewildering terror that the scourge was down upon them. Recovering sufficiently they generously shared in the sick nursing around them, for all were one family now, and as soon as the number of cases diminished in one house, the Sisters from there hurried to the relief of the house most sorely pressed.

During the first weeks of August, the Hospital, the Hotel Dieu and the vast Charity Hospital with its hundreds and hundreds of sick were rapidly filling up with victims of the contagion.

On August 22nd, Sister Agnes Slavin, Sister Servant of the Charity Hospital writes to Mother Euphemia.

New Orleans
Charity Hospital
August 22, 1878

My very dear Mother,
The grace of our Lord be with us forever.

My many occupations have not left me one moment to write to you. I have had Sister Keenan sick with the fever since Monday morning. Thank God this is the fourth day and she is doing well. Dr. Smythe comes three times a day. I feel so grateful to him, as I have unbounded confidence in him. The other dear Sisters are well and we have plenty to do. The young Sisters try to rival the old ones in their care of our poor fever cases. If our dear Lord only spares the Sisters, I will be satisfied.
Affectionately in our All
Sister Agnes Slavin
U.d.o.c.s.o.t.p.s.
[the acronym means “unworthy Daughter of Charity, servant of the poor sick”]

The annals go on to note that some of the Sisters caught yellow fever as well, and some died from it. Back in Emmitsburg, the Sisters at the Central House did the only thing they could do: constant prayer for the Sisters and the areas affected by the outbreak.

And the Central House was not unmindful of its duty to pray. Every Sister had permission to go as far as her duty permitted, to pray before the Blessed Sacrament for the cessation of the Scourge. A picture of St. Roch was exposed in the Community room, a lamp burning on the altar. A prayer to sue for God’s mercy in time of danger was said publicly at the noon or dinner Examen, the Parce Domini sung every Sunday at Benediction.

The Sisters’ prayer were to no avail, as Sisters continued to get sick, and continued to die.

Charity Hospital, New Orleans
August 29, 1878
My dearest Mother,
The grace of our Lord be with us forever!
On my dearest Mother, we are in the midst of sorrow, and none but our Lord to help us. Our good little Sister McKenzie died this morning, after an illness of a few days. O, what a frightful disease it is! I have nursed our two poor Sisters. I could form no idea of the disease before. Our Sisters are overtaxed, and I was obliged to ask Sister Angelica for some help. She sent me Sisters Hall and Mary Frances. O, dear Mother please pray for your poor Sisters in the South. All are full of courage and good will. Sister Mary Agnes offered to take any Sisters who were afraid of the fever, but none were willing to leave their posts. Father Beecher is sick with the fever.
Devotedly and affectionately,
Sister Agnes Slavin
U.d.o.c.

By September the outbreak had reached Vicksburg. Accounts of the yellow fever in Vicksburg will be the subject of the next post.

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Mother Seton, Patroness of the Sea Services

Carville aerial view

Aerial view of the U.S. Public Service Hospital at Carville, Louisiana

Over the weekend our friends at the National Shrine of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton held their annual Pilgrimage for the Sea Services. The Pilgrimage, held every year on the first Sunday in October, is a special Mass in honor of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton as Patroness of the Sea Services. Mother Seton’s son William served in the United States Navy from 1818 to 1834. Her son Richard served, as a civilian, as a captain’s clerk on the U.S.S. Cyane from June of 1822 until his death on June 26, 1823. Richard was buried at sea. Shortly after Mother Seton’s canonization in 1975, then-Chief of Navy Chaplains, Monsignor John J. O’Connor (later John Cardinal O’Connor, Archbishop of New York) took the initiative to proclaim Mother Seton “Patroness of the Sea Services” – the Navy, the Marine Corps, the Coast Guard, the Merchant Marine, and the U.S. Public Health Service.

The U.S. Public Health Service traces its history back to 1798 when it was established by Congress to provide health care to sick and injured merchant seamen. In 1870 the Marine Hospital Service was recognized as a national hospital system with centralized administration under a medical officer, the Supervising Surgeon, who was later given the title of Surgeon General. Mother Seton has a connection with public health as well. Her father, Dr. Richard Bayley, was the first public health officer for the Port of New York as a result of his work on the yellow fever epidemic in the late 18th century.

The Daughters of Charity have a special connection with the Public Health Service. From 1896 to 2005 the Daughters ministered to patients with Hansen’s disease (formerly known as leprosy) at what is today known as the National Hansen’s Disease Programs, located in Carville, Louisiana. The hospital in Carville was founded in 1894 as the Louisiana Leper Home. The Daughters began their ministry at Carville in 1896. In 1921 the hospital was taken over by the US Public Health Service and became known as U.S. Marine Hospital #66. The Carville site is no longer used for patient care. In the 1990s it was returned to the State of Louisiana, and today it is home to the Louisiana National Guard. The site is also a National Historic District and the home of the National Hansen’s Disease Museum.

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Ministries – Baltimore Infirmary, 1823

(Passage from the Provincial Annals of 1823 used with permission of the Daughters of Charity Archives)

On this first day of October we recall the first group of Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph’s who began the work of the Baltimore Infirmary in October of 1823. The Provincial Annals for that year recorded the beginning of the mission:

“In October of 1823, the Professors of the Medical Infirmary, Baltimore, offered the charge of this Institution to our Sisters. This was our first mission to take care of the sick. Sister Joanna Smith was appointed Sister Servant and as her companions, Sisters Ann Gruber, Adele Salva and three, not yet professed, namely Sisters Ambrosia Magner, Appolonia Graver and Veronica Gouch. As may be supposed our dear Sisters labored under many trials and difficulties. Everything was new to them, the Infirmary, at that time, and indeed for years, was small and inconvenient. But what cannot the love of God achieve, when it burns in the heart, as it did in these dear Sisters? And the consolation they experienced was so great, that these hardships were esteemed as pleasures.”

The Sisters served at the Baltimore Infirmary until 1876.

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