Texas Standard » Stories from Texas

The Man Who Led The Battle Against Yellow Fever


Listen Later

By W. F. Strong

I’m walking on the veranda of the Gorgas Building at Texas Southmost College in Brownsville. It’s named for the famous Army physician, William Gorgas, who was sent here to Fort Brown in 1882. This building was already here when he was. It was the hospital he ran. What he would learn here, and what would happen to him, would change the world.

Gorgas was just 27 years old when arrived at Fort Brown. There was a full-blown yellow fever epidemic raging at the time. It was so named because it turned eyes and skin yellow. About half the people who came down with it, died. Yellow fever was not only deadly, it was quick. You could feel fine on Wednesday morning, have symptoms kick-in that afternoon, and be dead by Saturday.

Gorgas fought yellow fever head on. He didn’t yet know that mosquitoes spread it, but he did know that good sanitation and quarantining patients was useful. He launched public health measures that helped cut short the epidemic. Perhaps the best thing that happened to him during this time, and it will seem a strange thing to say, is that he came down with yellow fever himself, but it gave him life long immunity. He vowed to make fighting the disease his life’s work.

His next significant posting in his war on yellow fever was to Cuba.  It was there that the research of the Cuban doctor, Carlos Finlay, had laid out a convincing case for mosquitoes being responsible for transmitting the illness. Walter Reed, a name you likely recognize, tested Finlay’s theories and proved without a doubt that mosquitoes were responsible. Then Gorgas put the knowledge to practical use with fumigation, screening, and outlawing open cisterns and standing water. Astoundingly, those efforts virtually wiped out yellow fever in Havana in a couple of years, reducing cases from thousands a year to fewer than 20.

Then Dr. Gorgas made his big leap onto the world stage. You will remember the French had tried to dig the Panama Canal but failed miserably because they lost thousands of workers to yellow fever. Disease drove them out and silenced the steam shovels. The Americans, in a cannot-fail bid to do what the French couldn’t, resumed the dig. But in the first years, yellow fever and malaria threatened to drive the Americans out, too. Some said it would have taken 50 years and 80 thousand lives to finish the canal under those conditions.

Gorgas was brought in to solve the problem. But the political leaders in charge didn’t want to hear anything about his mosquito theory. They told him to keep that crazy theory to himself because “everyone knew that those tropical illnesses came from miasma, bad air.” Hell, the word Malaria itself came from Italian, translating verbatim “mal” “aria” – bad air. Gorgas learned as Galileo did that getting the world, even scientists, to ditch a centuries old belief system in favor of a new one, has always been unfathomably difficult.

Gorgas wanted to take what he had learned in Brownsville and Cuba and put it to work on a grand scale in Panama. He applied for a million dollars to protect Panama. The U.S. gave him 50 thousand. But with such poor funding, hundreds of workers were dying each month and the Americans risked being embarrassed by failure, just like the French. Teddy Roosevelt himself intervened and more or less said “give Gorgas what he wants.”

So it was then that Gorgas screened all the houses, buildings and particularly the hospitals in the Canal Zone. This was essential because a patient could only get yellow fever from a mosquito that had bitten someone with yellow fever. Gorgas also had an army of fumigators at work across the isthmus every day.

As he had in Cuba, Gorgas got rid of standing water and required covers on cisterns. He also drained swamps and treated undrainable waters with oil to keep larvae from forming. Within two years yellow fever had been completely eradicated from Panama.

Gorgas was considered the medical hero of the canal because, without his work, the engineers and diggers and construction workers could never have done their work. Gorgas without question, made the canal a reality.

After Panama, Gorgas eventually became Surgeon General of the U.S. Army and was knighted by the King of England for his work in tropical diseases, from which the British greatly benefited.

So here I sit on the veranda of his old hospital at Fort Brown in Texas. The building still bears Gorgas’ name. I also admire the fact that his name has a place of honor 8 thousand miles away on the side of the London School for Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Here at Texas Southmost College, funded from this very building, are many fine programs in nursing and health professions active today.  I think Gorgas would be pleased.

The post The Man Who Led The Battle Against Yellow Fever appeared first on KUT & KUTX Studios -- Podcasts.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Texas Standard » Stories from TexasBy Texas Standard, W.F. Strong

  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8

4.8

207 ratings


More shows like Texas Standard » Stories from Texas

View all
Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! by NPR

Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!

38,756 Listeners

This American Life by This American Life

This American Life

91,149 Listeners

The Moth by The Moth

The Moth

27,285 Listeners

Stuff You Should Know by iHeartPodcasts

Stuff You Should Know

78,338 Listeners

The Rachel Maddow Show by Rachel Maddow, MSNBC

The Rachel Maddow Show

36,855 Listeners

Freakonomics Radio by Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher

Freakonomics Radio

32,140 Listeners

The Joe Rogan Experience by Joe Rogan

The Joe Rogan Experience

227,954 Listeners

TED Radio Hour by NPR

TED Radio Hour

21,957 Listeners

Song of the Day by KUT & KUTX Studios

Song of the Day

95 Listeners

Austin Music Minute by KUT & KUTX Studios, Laurie Gallardo

Austin Music Minute

9 Listeners

KUT Weekend by KUT & KUTX Studios

KUT Weekend

40 Listeners

Two Guys on Your Head by KUT & KUTX Studios, Dr. Art Markman & Dr. Bob Duke

Two Guys on Your Head

233 Listeners

Liner Notes by KUT & KUTX Studios, Neil Blumofe

Liner Notes

8 Listeners

Views and Brews by KUT & KUTX Studios

Views and Brews

15 Listeners

In Black America by KUT & KUTX Studios, John L. Hanson

In Black America

291 Listeners

Texas Standard by Texas Standard

Texas Standard

245 Listeners

In Perspective by KUT & KUTX Studios

In Perspective

2 Listeners

1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast by Jon Hagadorn  Podcast Host

1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast

1,678 Listeners

Higher Ed by KUT & KUTX Studios, Jennifer Stayton

Higher Ed

31 Listeners

The Secret Ingredient by KUT & KUTX Studios, Raj Patel, Tom Philpott & Rebecca McInroy

The Secret Ingredient

37 Listeners

KUT » Stuart Hall: In Conversations by KUT & KUTX Studios, Ben Carrington & Rebecca McInroy

KUT » Stuart Hall: In Conversations

10 Listeners

Texas Standard » Typewriter Rodeo by Texas Standard, Typewriter Rodeo

Texas Standard » Typewriter Rodeo

14 Listeners

Pod Save America by Crooked Media

Pod Save America

87,270 Listeners

History That Doesn't Suck by Prof. Greg Jackson

History That Doesn't Suck

5,971 Listeners

Fiction - Comedy Fiction by The Sunset Explorers

Fiction - Comedy Fiction

6,451 Listeners

SmartLess by Jason Bateman, Sean Hayes, Will Arnett

SmartLess

58,333 Listeners

Pause/Play by KUT & KUTX Studios

Pause/Play

40 Listeners

Black Austin Matters by KUT & KUTX Studios, Richard J. Reddick, Lisa B. Thompson

Black Austin Matters

51 Listeners

The Tucker Carlson Show by Tucker Carlson Network

The Tucker Carlson Show

16,887 Listeners

(SPF 1000) Vampire Sunscreen by KUT & KUTX Studios, Laurie Gallardo

(SPF 1000) Vampire Sunscreen

5 Listeners

24 Hours in Austin by KUT & KUTX Studios, Matt Largey

24 Hours in Austin

9 Listeners

Take a Moment by Marnie Castor

Take a Moment

3 Listeners

Money Talk with Carl Stuart by Carl Stuart

Money Talk with Carl Stuart

3 Listeners