“Mr. Leezen has the ague and the fever, Eliza the headache. Mr. Thomas Gallagher had the intermittent fever and his son the remitting fever. Many sick at the river at Green Creek. Mr. Rogers is yet hearty, but his housekeeper has another visit from the fever and ague.” These were just a few of the quotes from Josiah Atkins’ letters to his brother back in Ashtabula, Ohio.
In 1824, Josiah, a personable young man, had come to
Lower Sandusky [Fremont, Ohio] to manage the sale of lands through the 20 miles of
Black Swamp to Perrysburg, Ohio. The tracts were the last federal lands for sale in
Ohio. Settlers ditched, grubbed, dug, chopped, and burned their way through a
120- foot right- of-way in the massive quagmire that would become the Maumee and
Western Reserve Road.
Like the settlers, Atkins soon became sick himself. He
wrote that he was at last freed from the shaking and fever. Yet, he told his
brother, “I am not well – there is something hanging or clinging about my
springs of life that tells me I am not well. My head is dizzy, my knees are
weak, my breath is short. I am anything less than half such a man as I was when
I came to this good and great city of Lower (than hell) Sandusky.”
Woodland Mosquito |
Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
Some thought it was the foul air and the swamp's gases that
was making nearly everyone sick. In reality, it was the ever present mosquitoes
that thrived in the pools of stagnant waters. They were the culprits that spread
malaria among these early pioneers. Many became so ill, they lay shaking in the
cabins, unable to work or care for their families. More than a third who came
gave up and moved on. No one really knows the exact death toll.
Mosquitoes carrying malaria not only brought death and misery
to the settlers of the Black Swamp, but as far back as the Bronze Age, they contributed
to the collapse of the Greek and Egyptian civilizations. For centuries
mosquitoes harboring malaria had sapped the strength of armies. At the surrender
of Yorktown, nearly half of Cornwallis’ soldiers were unfit for battle due to
malaria. According to historian Amanda Foreman, the Panama Canal was only
completed because of quinine and better mosquito control. In World War II, General
MacArthur believed that for every one of his Pacific Theater divisions, two
were unfit to fight because of malaria.
Today, the Grim Reaper continues to take its toll.
Each year, more than 400,000 die from malaria throughout the world. Two thirds
are children under the age of five. Welcome news has finally come! This year
for the first time, the World Health Organization has approved a childhood
vaccine against malaria!
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