At the turn of the 20th century, the world was gripped by a that had spread from China to port cities around the globe. So when a 41-year-old San Franciscan named Wong Chut King died of a particularly violent disease in March 1900, there were worries that the pandemic had finally reached U.S. soil.
After examining samples from Wong鈥檚 autopsy, the head of the city鈥檚 Marine Hospital Service confirmed those fears: the plague had come to America. And unfortunately, it never left.
Wong鈥檚 death marked the beginning of the United States鈥 first plague epidemic, which infected at least 280 people and killed at least 172 over the next eight years (the actual numbers of cases and deaths may be higher). The disease was by rat鈥搃nfested steamships arriving at California鈥檚 shores from affected areas, mostly from Asia. But instead of alerting the public, city and state officials鈥攊ncluding the governor of California鈥攄enied there was any plague outbreak at all.
The Plague Presented a Threat to California's Economy
The reason for this cover-up was partly economic. There was a fear in San Francisco and the state capital of Sacramento that if news of the plague spread, it would hurt California鈥檚 economy, says , a lecturer at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism and author of .
鈥淭here was a very real threat that California鈥檚 $40 million fresh produce industry鈥ould be lost,鈥 she says. With that in mind, 鈥渢he state actually appealed to and secured the collaboration of the surgeon general of the United States鈥 to keep word of the disease silent.
Official silence about the disease also entailed undermining Dr. Joseph J. Kinyoun, the head of the Marine Hospital Service in San Francisco who had identified the plague bacteria in Wong鈥檚 body. As a public health official, he was determined to stop the disease from spreading. At the same time, local politicians, business owners and newspapers were determined to discredit him, says , a reporter for Reuters and author of .
鈥淵ou had the local newspapers calling [Kinyoun] a fake, calling him suspicious, implying that he was just trying to take money from the public coffers and this was all a big scam,鈥 he says. These newspapers even suggested 鈥渉e was injecting dead bodies with plague so that he looked like a hero.鈥 Business leaders and politicians echoed this rhetoric. 鈥淎 state senator in Sacramento stood on the senate floor and said that Kinyoun should be hanged for what he was doing,鈥 he says.
New Field of Medical Science Met With Skepticism
This large-scale denial of the plague was also, in part, a rejection of a new type of science that few understood. Kinyoun, who is now known as , was at the forefront of the field of medical bacteriology. Unlike doctors from an earlier era, Kinyoun used a microscope to study microorganisms his patients couldn鈥檛 see. California Governor Henry Gage was particularly averse to this new science.
鈥淸Gage] basically said: If you can鈥檛 see the disease, if you can鈥檛 see what鈥檚 happening, then how do I know it exists?鈥 Randall says. And like many others in California, Gage wasn鈥檛 even sure white people could get the plague in the first place. 鈥淭he idea was that if your ancestors had survived the plague in Europe, then you somehow evolved immunity,鈥 he says.
Contrary to this misguided belief, the plague did infect white San Franciscans; but in the beginning, it hit residents of Chinatown the hardest. Many white residents initially remained unconcerned since they attributed the outbreak to the racist perception that Chinese immigrants were disease-ridden and dirty. Residents of Chinatown, in turn, sometimes hid the bodies of plague victims to prevent further discrimination against their community.
鈥淧eople [in Chinatown] were desperate to keep it confidential, and there were very good reasons for this,鈥 Chase says. After the first confirmed plague death, 鈥渢here was a blockade against Chinatown, at which time people could not go to work, they could not get goods in or out. The people were hungry.鈥 There was a real fear that the discovery of more plague victims would lead to more quarantines or building-burning, a crude method of fighting disease.
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Knowledge of the plague outbreak eventually managed to spread outside of California. Out-of-state newspapers picked up news of the outbreak a few weeks after Wong鈥檚 death, and Kinyoun sent federal officials regular memos about the plague鈥檚 escalation. Just as California鈥檚 political and business leaders had feared, states threatened to cut off trade with California to prevent the plague from spreading.
Still, California leaders stuck to their story. In a letter to the U.S. secretary of state cosigned by San Francisco jeans magnate Levi Strauss, Governor Gage blamed Kinyoun for the 鈥減lague fake,鈥 as he called it, and claimed San Francisco had A year after the first plague victim died, Gage successfully convinced the federal government to relocate Kinyoun to Detroit. By then, there were about 100 known deaths from the plague.
The man who replaced Kinyoun as head of the Marine Hospital Service in San Francisco was Dr. Rupert Blue. Though he too faced resistance in fighting the plague, he had advantages over Kinyoun. He was better at communicating scientific and medical information to the public, and also better at earning the trust of the city鈥檚 Chinese community.
Blue helped end the outbreak with initiatives to clean the city and eradicate its rats, whose fleas were infecting humans with the plague. By 1908, San Francisco was , and California newspapers reported this news even though they鈥檇 previously denied the plague鈥檚 existence.
The Plague Persists in the United States
However, this didn鈥檛 mean the plague had left the country. The United States still reports an average of seven human plague cases each year, . Almost all of these cases occur in the western United States. In the summer of 2019, forced parts of Colorado鈥檚 Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge to shut down.
In reporting for her book, Chase learned that scientists at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Fort Collins believe the strain that now exists throughout the west originates from the strain that was first carried to U.S. shores by ship rats around 1900.
Chase says, 鈥淚t was very likely the delay in controlling the San Francisco plague鈥 allowed it to spread鈥攁nd persist.