Posts in VPM
In 1918 Pandemic, Black Richmond Faced New Virus and Old Racism

On October 12, 1918, Maggie Walker was interrupted from her work with a call from the governor.

Walker had a full plate. She was the first African American woman to charter a bank, and a leader in Richmond’s Black community.

Governor Westmoreland Davis needed Walker’s help. The influenza pandemic was ravaging Richmond, with the Richmond Times-Dispatch reporting 549 deaths by the end of that month.

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A Public Calamity

From The Future of America’s Past—
Governors nationwide have moved to reopen their states, even as the coronavirus crisis continues to grow. This impulse has a precedent: it’s what many towns, including Richmond, Virginia, did during the 1918 flu — a global health crisis that killed more than 50 million people worldwide, and more Americans than all 20th- and 21st-century wars combined.

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