Editor's Note: In this article, which is used by permission of
the Advertiser Company and which first appeared in the
Montgomery Advertiser on December 10, 1950, Maxie
Pepperman, old time Advertiser reporter, tells of some of his
experiences in the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1897.
The belief was that the germ floated around more at night than
in the day. Every night citizens in different sections ofthe city
would light huge wooden bonfires in the middle of the streets to
run the germs away. I recall passing these bonfires with
smoldering wood making clouds of smoke. The gloom of that smoke
and the gloom in one's heart made it most depressing.
All mail from New Orleans and Mobile was fumigated. That is, each
letter was perforated with many holes and the vapor blown into
the envelope to kill the germs. I remember that a man named
Stebbins, who was employed at the local post office and who
handled mail, died of the yellow fever. After that very few
people would touch a letter which came from an infected area even
if it had been fumigated.
About that time my mother decided to come home, to leave the
younger children with the relatives while she stayed at home with
my father.
When you
saw him coming up the sidewalk and when about 10 feet away he
would focus those eyes on you. As he got closer, with fixed a
stare, his eyes simply penetrated all through you. When he shook
hands, your hand would get clammy. I would resent his asking how
I was feeling. He also wore a brown mustache and when he smiled
the ends would curl up like Mephisto. Well, to get back to the
yellow fever. I had learned stenography and was looking for a
job. On a Friday I had an interview with a railroad official who
gave me several dictations and offered me a job. I was to report
for work the following Monday morning. On Sunday afternoon
following my interview, and one day before I was to start to
work, my father and I took a buggy ride around the deserted city.
Suddenly I saw a terrible sight. We were passing the home of the
man for whom I was to start to work the next day and I saw a lone
hearse parked in front of his house. Then the front door opened
and out walked my friend the undertaker, all dressed in deep
black. He eased across the porch and looked in both directions as
though to warn any passer by to hasten on. Then he went back to
the door and stooped down and took hold of the front end of the
casket and dragged it across the porch. He then walked backward
down the front steps, holding up the end of the casket till it
reached the edge of the porch and then bumped it down step by
step to the sidewalk. He finally got in the hearse and, quickly
mounting the driver's seat, he drove away to the cemetery. No
friends allowed--not even any pallbearers. People were buried
almost immediately after they died. And the man in that casket
was the man whom I had talked with on Friday and to start to work
with the next morning. He had died of the yellow fever. Well, I
was everything but paralyzed with fear. I was at first hot and
then had chills all over. I just knew I had the yellow fever. I
could not sleep that night, neither could I eat. My father
decided that I should go away and in a day or two he sent my
brother and myself to Nashville, which city, like Atlanta, said
the gerrn could not live in their climate and those two cities
opened their gates to the refugees.
the test
that yellow fever
was not a floating germ in the air, but could only be transmitted
through the sting of a certain breed of mosquito known as the
stegomyia and all honor to Gen. William C. Gorgas, an Alabamian,
who was then surgeon general of the Army who proved these
findings by cleaning up the pest holes in Panama and completely
exterminated this breed of mosquitoes and made the building of
the Panama Canal possible. I firmly believe that some time, some
how, some where a most unthought of discovery will come to light
and other scourges of the present day will, like the yellow
fever, be banished from the face of the earth.