Spanish flu 'lockdown' of 1918: schools closed and pm struck down

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* SPANISH FLU WREAKED HAVOC ACROSS THE WORLD, KILLING 50MILLION PEOPLE GLOBALLY AND AROUND 200,000 IN UK * IN THE UK, MANY SCHOOLS WERE CLOSED, BUSES AND TRAINS WERE CANCELLED AND MINES HAD


TO CLOSE * LIKE BORIS JOHNSON LAST YEAR, PRIME MINISTER DAVID LLOYD GEORGE ALSO FELL ILL AND WAS TREATED IN MANCHESTER  One year ago today, a sweeping national lockdown was imposed by Prime


Minister Boris Johnson to cope with the coronavirus pandemic. In what is the biggest crisis since the Second World War, businesses have had to shut their doors, schools were closed and


thousands of Britons have lost their jobs. But a little over 100 years ago, the Spanish flu pandemic also wreaked havoc across the world, killing at least 50million people.  In the UK, many


schools were closed, buses and trains were cancelled and people were advised to self-isolate if they caught influenza. And in an eerie echo of how Mr Johnson came close to death last year


after catching coronavirus, the Prime Minister in 1918 – David Lloyd George – became seriously unwell with influenza. Below, MailOnline looks back at how Britons coped with a pandemic which


ended up killing more than 200,000 people in the UK – after the First World War had taken more than 800,000 soldiers' lives. Prime Minister David Lloyd George's 'attack of


influenza' which could have killed him In September 1918, Lloyd George, who had been Prime Minister since 1916, fell ill with Spanish flu at the same age – 55 – that Mr Johnson was


struck down by coronavirus. With Britain still engaged in war with Germany, the PM was on a tour of Manchester and was set to give a series of rousing speeches and attend events. However, he


had to cut his plans short because he became so unwell. Speaking on a BBC Radio 4 programme about the pandemic, historian and author Catharine Arnold said Lloyd George was a 'very


forceful' man so initially 'pushed himself on' when he began to feel unwell. But the PM then became so ill that his schedule had to be scrapped and he needed to be cared for


in a makeshift room in Manchester town hall. Last year, there were few updates about Mr Johnson's condition when he caught coronavirus. The seriousness of the situation only became


fully apparent when it was announced he had gone to hospital.  A further update then revealed he had been admitted to intensive care. In 1918, there was far less detail about the PM's


condition. Officials were worried that, if it were announced that Lloyd George was seriously unwell, it would be a huge propaganda victory to Germany. Ms Arnold said: 'They made up a


bed for him in Manchester town hall and they got a top doctor in. 'He immediately said: 'I think he's got Spanish flu, don't tell anyone.' 'Quite a few people


thought he was a goner. Basically if it had got out that the PM was mortally ill, it would have been a huge propaganda victory to the Germans.' Despite the lack of detail in official


pronouncements, Lloyd George in fact needed the help of a respirator to breath. His condition was later described by his valet as 'touch and go'. Ultimately though, like Mr


Johnson, Lloyd George did survive his ordeal. He had a fever for a week and needed several months of recuperation but was well enough to lead the British delegation at the Treaty of


Versailles in the summer of 1919, which officially brought hostilities with Germany to an end. How schools were closed – hundreds of children were kept at home as virus gripped parts of


nation Although there was no centrally imposed lockdown like those seen across most of the world in response to coronavirus, steps were taken at a local and regional level to try to slow the


spread of Spanish flu. The first wave hit Britain in May 1918, with the first recorded case in Glasgow. Within weeks, the virus had spread southwards before appearing to peter out in the


summer. Much like with the second and third wave of the Covid-19 virus, Spanish flu then returned – in October 1918 - and spread alarmingly fast. In response, hundreds of elementary schools


were closed, although schools in London only shut their doors if staff absences made it impossible to keep them open. In Aberystwyth, Wales, most schools were shut from December until


January 1919. In Manchester, the city's education committee agreed to shut all schools on the advice of Dr James Niven. Niven was Manchester's Medical Officer of Health. Speaking


on a BBC Radio 4 programme about the pandemic, historian and author Catharine Arnold said there was 'no doubt' that Dr Niven's approach saved 'many, many lives'. The


medic also warned people to avoid public gatherings, said that flu sufferers should be kept warm in a ventilated room and warned that sick people should not return to work except under


medical advice. RELATED ARTICLES Many theatres, dance halls, cinemas closed for months Leisure venues such as theatres and cinemas are closed as part of the current national lockdown, as


they were last year when the first nationwide measures were imposed in response to coronavirus. When Spanish flu struck, Dr Aida Milne explained on the BBC Radio 4 programme how cinema


owners 'protested' at being forced to shut, because they were worried about going out of business. In an attempt to keep their establishments open, cinema owners agreed to take


steps to limit the spread of flu. Dr Milne said: 'So what they did in many places was they agreed that they would allow a time between showings so that they could fumigate and


disinfect. 'And they also barred children from coming into it because they considered children to be super spreaders.' Buses and trains cancelled, mines forced to close and police


shortages Writing in his book The Spanish Flu Epidemic And Its Influence On History, author Jaime Breitnauer explains how daily activities in Britain were severely disrupted by the pandemic.


She said: 'Across the nation, daily activities were drawing to a halt, with bus and train services postponed, post offices and bakeries on limited hours due to staff shortages and


undertakers turning down orders as they were already struggling to process the number of dead.' After four years of the ravages of the First World War, there were already food and fuel


shortages. Nearly everyone was either directly or indirectly affected by the injury, death or disappearance of a soldier in the ongoing conflict. By July 1918, it was reported how some coal


mines in Newcastle had as many as 70 per cent of their workers off sick. This brought production – during a time of great need – 'practically to a standstill', writes Breitnauer.


The author adds that the Prudential insurance company noted during its annual meeting in January 1919 how, between November and the end of December the year before, £650,000 was paid out to


cover industrial losses from flu. In the same period, just £279,000 had been paid for losses from war. During the second wave, 1,500 police officers in London – a third of the workforce –


failed to turn up for work because they were unwell. Thousands of children orphaned and general health hammered Breitnauer also sheds light on how the number of orphans in England, Scotland


and Wales 'increased sharply' as a result of Spanish flu. The crisis ended up spawning three charitable organisations to care for them: the National Child Adoption Association


(NCAA); the National Adoption Society (NAS) and the National Council for the Unmarried Mother and her Child (NCUMC). They were set up specifically to rehome children. As for general health,


the mortality rate for women aged 25 to 30 was 600 times higher in 1918 than in the previous four years. Pregnant women also had a 50 per cent higher chance of developing lung-related


illnesses, such as pneumonia. The year of 1918 was also the first on record in which the number of deaths outweighed the number of live births, Breitnauer adds.  How bishops said the


Government would have to pass legislation forcing churches to close as many refused to shut their doors  Boris Johnson's Government was criticised in some quarters for banning communal


worship inside churches, synagogues, mosques and other faith venues during the first national lockdown. Whilst there was no nationwide shutdown of churches during the Spanish flu crisis,


some local authorities tried to force them to close. However, speaking on the BBC's Radio 4 documentary, Professor Karen Sayer, from Leeds Trinity University said a lot of them


defiantly remained open. She said: 'A lot of churches refused to close. Some quite high-flying bishops said the government would have to pass an act to close the churches. '[They


said] surely it's all right if we just keep them well ventilated anyway. They were kind of defending that space.'  Will Troughton, the curator of photography at the National


Library of Wales, said on the BBC's radio documentary about the crisis that people in Wales were asked not to go to church or chapel. He said: 'Not going to church or chapel would


seem anathema to most people. That is how they got their information about the world.'  Public health posters which warned people to 'wear a mask' and to 'wash your


hands'  In 2020 and 2021, Britons have been bombarded by official posters and adverts warning them about the risks posed by coronavirus and the need to observe social distancing and


wash their hands. When Spanish flu struck the UK, there were similar adverts. One, dating from Christmas 1918, urged Britons to 'wear a mask' and 'wash your hands'.  It


added: 'Avoid touching your face. Maintain a safe distance from others'.  However, the emergence of Spanish flu also gave less scrupulous businessmen the chance to earn money by


marketing products which they said would help guard against the infection. Professor John Watkins said to the BBC: 'The medical profession was almost incapable of providing an answer to


the flu and there was a whole plethora of people trying to argue that their unctions and potions are going to be efficacious in every way to give you a cure of the flu. 'People claimed


that Bovril… Oxo… would even cure flu.' On advert claimed: 'A cup full of Oxo two or three times a day will prove an immense service as a protective measure. It's a fact a


sure preventative against influenza is coco.' Another message from a shop spoke of the 'immense value of Bovril'.  How people were warned to self-isolate Although there were


no laws about social-distancing, there was still general advice which warned about how Spanish flu was highly contagious. A report in the Daily Mail in 1918 read: '...the first and


obvious measure is to avoid infection as far as possible. If the person could isolate himself on top of a mountain he would certainly escape; if he travels daily in crowded trains and


omnibuses and mingles with crowds under cover, he will almost surely fall a victim sooner or later.' It also warned that the virus was present in the 'nose and upper part of the


air passages', adding that when a sufferer 'coughs or sneezes' he 'spread infection'. The report continued: 'The danger of catching the disease in the open is


not very great, but crowded streets, like the Strand and Cheapside in London are little better than theatres and churches.' If concluded by saying that a man who 'walks two or


three miles' to work will 'defy the microbe', but if he travelled in a 'stuffy train or omnibus', the virus would 'have the better of him'.  The Spanish


Flu Epidemic And Its Influence On History, by Jaime Breitnauer, is published by Pen & Sword.   How barbers stayed open A common feature of the coronavirus pandemic on social media has


been Britons sharing pictures of their unkempt hair styles after salons were forced to close as part of the nationwide lockdown. It was announced earlier this year that hair and beauty


salons would not be able to reopen until April 12.  In the Spanish flu pandemic, there were no nationwide laws which forced similar establishments to close.  Images show barbers wearing


masks as they continue to cut clients' hair.    'Isolation Hospitals' were set up to cope with increasing patient numbers as public health took a hammering  As the NHS


grappled to cope with the deluge of coronavirus patients last year, temporary 'Nightingale' hospitals were set up, including at the Excel Centre in London.   Although most were


barely used due to staffing issues, they were hailed by Health Secretary Matt Hancock as having played a 'critical role' in the pandemic.  During the Spanish flu pandemic,


makeshift field hospitals were set up as conventional establishments failed to cope with the deluge of patients. Breitnauer explains how ordinary hospitals became 'centres for the


spread of the disease' and as patients were kept in wards with 'sealed' windows despite expert insistent they should have access to 'cool, dry and fresh air'. She


adds: 'Some statistics even appear to show that those in the makeshift hospitals, especially tent hospitals, fared better than their counterparts on the wards.'  How deaths from


Spanish flu compare to coronavirus fatalities The global mortality rate for Spanish flu is estimated to have been between 10 and 20 per cent of those who were infected.  Young adults aged


between 20 and 30 were the hardest hit, with onset devastatingly quick. Overall, around 50million people globally lost their lives. In the UK, the figure was around 228,000.  By contrast,


126,000 Britons have lost their lives due to coronavirus. The average age of people who died from the disease in England and Wales is just over 82. WHAT WAS SPANISH FLU? The 1918 flu


pandemic was unusually deadly and the first of two involving the H1N1 influenza virus. It infected 500 million people globally, more than one-third of the world's population, including


people on remote Pacific islands and in the Arctic. It resulted in the deaths of an estimated three to five per cent of the world's population, making it one of the deadliest natural


disasters in human history. Within months it had killed three times as many as World War I and did it more quickly than any other illness in recorded history. Most influenza outbreaks


disproportionately kill juvenile, elderly, or already weakened patients. By contrast, the 1918 pandemic predominantly killed previously healthy young adults. To maintain morale, wartime


censors minimised early reports of illness and mortality in Germany, Britain, France, and the United States. However, newspapers were free to report the epidemic's effects in Spain.


This created a false impression of Spain as being especially hard hit, leading to the pandemic's nickname Spanish flu. The close quarters and massive troop movements of World War I


hastened the pandemic and probably both increased transmission and augmented mutation, researchers believe. The true global mortality rate from the pandemic is not known, but an estimated 10


per cent to 20 per cent of those who were infected died. This would lead to a death toll of between 50 to 100 million people.