The Atlanta Lawyer June/July 2020 Vol. 19, No. 1 | Page 15

IN THE PROFESSION Much like pandemic-level diseases like COVID-19, privacy concerns do not discriminate based on a person’s profession, and neither of these concerns are going away. colds on the growing use of steam heat.) Camp Gordon The military began building a temporary infantry training camp in Chamblee in 1917. In December 1918, it changed to a demobilization center as peace seemed to be breaking out. The base closed in 1919 and was abandoned a year later. It was huge. The base consisted of 1,435 buildings spread over 4,672 acres. Peachtree DeKalb Airport now sits on a major portion of the camp site, but the Army claimed a larger tract of 11,303 acres. Primary facilities, such as the base hospital and the officers’ training school, were located in areas adjacent to the present PDA campus. In addition, the camp operated a 6000 acre artillery range in Cobb County just south of Marietta. At its peak, 41,162 soldiers trained at the Chamblee facility. Georgia Railway & Power Company built a double track line from the city to accommodate commuting. Soldiers in the Second Infantry Replacement Regiment started showing symptoms of influenza in early September, 1918. A lockdown order affecting soldiers exhibiting influenza symptoms went into effect on September 18. Eventually, entire units were quarantined when one member took ill. By the end of September, the camp reported 1,893 cases of Spanish flu. Soldiers slept outdoors, 50 feet apart, gargled regularly, irrigated nasal passages, and otherwise wore masks. The Army modified the quarantine at Camp Gordon on October 15, claiming that the disease no longer constituted a menace to troops. New troops were still required to wear masks and quarantined for ten days. As a result, Camp Gordon ended up with around 6,000 flu cases, a smaller percentage of infections than those founds in Atlanta. No Cause for Alarm The Atlanta city health officer, Dr. J. P. Kennedy, assured citizens at the beginning of October that there were few cases of influenza and only one death. That would change. Kennedy noted that Atlanta was a transportation hub funneling travelers from infected cities to the area, so he expected a wave of infections. Dr. T. F. Abercrombie, secretary of the state board of health, decided that the decision to quarantine should be made by local officials. Kennedy and the Atlanta Board of Health closed all schools, libraries, churches, and places of entertainment on October 7. The Atlanta City Council quickly passed a resolution supporting the decision to close. Fulton County imposed the same restrictions later in the day. On October 20 the state board of health reported 3,435 new cases of flu and 69 deaths throughout the state in the past 24 hours. Abercrombie told the The Atlanta Constitution, “It is so much better in Georgia than in most of the other states affected, that we have no cause for alarm.” Kennedy, the city health officer, reported 7 deaths and 1,167 cases of flu during the same time. A problem with the numbers, according to Dr. William Brady, a syndicated columnist carried by The Atlanta Constitution, results from the absence of any laboratory method to differentiate the Spanish flu from colds or other flu-like maladies: “It is purely a matter of the attending physician's judgment whether the illness shall be judged ‘influenza’ or not.” Kennedy thought that everything, except schools, could re-open by October 24. The Board of Health voted to continue the quarantine despite the advice. Mayor Candler had been pushing to allow businesses to return to normal schedules. He called a special meeting of the City Council that voted to open the city on October 26, effectively overruling the Board of Health. Conversely, officials canceled the Georgia State Fair scheduled to open on October 3. The Southeastern Fair opened but required everyone to wear masks. “The entire grounds will resemble a Turkish harem,” The Atlanta Journal predicted. The fair attracted as many as 25,000 Atlantans a day. As the situation continued to deteriorate, The Atlanta Constitution reported on November 23 that according to Kennedy, “While Decatur and Kirkwood are apparently having a return of the influenza trouble, there appears to be no indications in Atlanta which would give cause for uneasiness here.” A few weeks later, Kennedy admitted that influenza had been on the increase for three weeks. 76 died in the week ending December 7; 75 died the previous week. Atlanta exhibited much lower infection and death rates than other cities throughout (continued on page 17) www.atlantabar.org THE ATLANTA LAWYER 15