Spanish Flu: The Spanish flu was an unusually deadly influenza pandemic. Lasting from January 1918 to December 1920, it infected 500 million people—about a quarter of the world’s population at the time.
Photos from Spanish Flu Pandemic:
These images from the time of #SpanishFlu are poignant for their similarity with images these days 💔 pic.twitter.com/OraFonENqW
— Auj Arif (@aujarif) April 9, 2020
All NYC workers wore masks. 1918. #SpanishFlu
— Luis B. Aramburu (@luisbaram) April 8, 2020
Nothing new under the sun. pic.twitter.com/kHzXeRhaOh
From the #Birmingham Gazette 11 March 1919: Birmingham Medical Officer of Health promoting the use of 'cheap influenza masks' for office workers. #influenza #PPE #1919#pandemic #SpanishFlu pic.twitter.com/9o4uj85mxj
— Born in Birmingham 1914-24 (@BornInBrum1914) April 6, 2020
https://twitter.com/robbrecht/status/1248508931263078400?s=20
https://twitter.com/RandVFoundation/status/1247817106982424577?s=20
When the 1918 #SpanishFlu reached Bengaluru
— Deccan Herald (@DeccanHerald) April 8, 2020
More than 1,95,000 people died in Mysore State, 40,000 in Bengaluru alone.
Read: https://t.co/7wril4bnp2 pic.twitter.com/AxOvcieuzk
https://twitter.com/JARodriguezJr/status/1248366834379829252?s=20
See all fashion trends eventually resurface. Time to live like it’s 1918 ladies! Style and function. #SpanishFlu #facemask pic.twitter.com/H34cDyoCcw
— Cheryl Shifflet (@cheryl_shifflet) April 7, 2020
https://twitter.com/folioUAlberta/status/1247900683472273413?s=20
https://twitter.com/hum_bolega/status/1245692047689830401?s=20
#ThursdayThought The #SpanishFlu did not originate in #Spain. It was called that because #Spanish newspapers were the first to report the pandemic. All other countries were involved in #WWI & censored information as it would probably lead to morale issues & desertions. #COVID2019 pic.twitter.com/VhPzgzr8B9
— Manny Ortega 🇺🇸🇵🇷 (@presidentmanny) April 9, 2020
AMID COVID-19 LEARN HISTORY THRU FICTION: Doctor remedies for Spanish flu: cinnamon, beef broth, wine. More about flu a century ago in ON THE SHORE (1917-1925), generational conflict in Lower East Side immigrant family. https://t.co/UBIeskpDRV #historicalfiction #spanishflu #wwi pic.twitter.com/bZKOIb0bkf
— Ann S. Epstein (@asewovenwords) April 9, 2020
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