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Description
Big Pandemic on the Prairie: The Spanish Flu in North Dakota is the first book-length account of North Dakota’s experience with one of the deadliest pandemics in history. Set against the backdrop of the waning days of World War I, Big Pandemic on the Prairie tells the story of another conflagration that began along the front lines before spreading to the farthest reaches of the globe. By late September 1918, the Spanish flu began afflicting North Dakotans. Authorities in the state instituted restrictions that affected the daily lives of citizens, including limits on public gatherings and the closing of schools and churches, interventions that resemble those enforced during the recent COVID-19 pandemic. These attempts at mitigating the spread of the flu hit just as politicians began campaigning in a pivotal election that gave full control of the state government to the upstart Nonpartisan League. North Dakota’s major newspapers provided a day-to-day accounting of the flu’s spread through the state. North Dakotans experienced the Spanish flu in varied ways.
Native Americans experienced strict quarantines. Nurses provided medicine and sustenance for those afflicted in both urban and rural areas, and purveyors of patent medicines attempted to profit. Big Pandemic on the Prairie traces the history of the disease as it coursed through North Dakota and shaped the history of the state and its communities.
ISBN
979-8-9891912-4-6
Publication Date
2024
Publisher
The Digital Press at the University of North Dakota
City
Grand Forks, ND
Recommended Citation
Price, Christopher Neal, "Big Pandemic on the Prairie: Spanish Flu in North Dakota" (2024). Digital Press Books. 29.
https://commons.und.edu/press-books/29
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
