
Titles
- Influenza Nineteen-eighteen
- American Experience (Television Program)
Attribution
produced and directed by Robert Kenner ; written by Ken Chowder ; a Robert Kenner Films production for the American Experience ; WGBHPublication Details
VideoPBS Home Video1998Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS MEDIA: VIDEO (MAIN) RA644.I6 I549 1998 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
View record in LOLA catalogLinks
Subject
- Influenza viruses — History
- Epidemics — United States — History
- Documentary films
- Historical films
- Video recordings for the hearing impaired
- Influenza viruses — History — Electronic information resource
- Epidemics — United States — History — Electronic information resource
- LAMSON LIBRARY VIDEO RECORDINGS
- LAMSON LIBRARY LINKS TO ELECTRONIC INFORMATION RESOURCES
Notes
- Subtitle on container: The worst epidemic in American history
- Distributed also by PBS Video
- Originally broadcast as a episode of: The American Experience
- Cinematography, Don Lenzer … [et al.]; editor, Alison Ellwood; narrator, Linda Hunt; music, Mark Adler
- Series host: David McCullough
- In September 1918, soldiers stationed near Boston suddenly began to die. Doctors found the victims’ lungs filled with a strange blue fluid. They identified the cause as influenza, but it was unlike any strain ever seen, and medical science proved powerless against it. In desperation, people turned to folk remedies, while frantic officials closed all public places and everyone was required to wear masks. But the virus was unstoppable, relentless, devastatingly lethal. By the time the epidemic ran its course, over 600,000 people were dead, more than all U.S. combat deaths of the 20th century
- VHS; stereo
- Closed-captioned for the hearing impaired
-

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