From
"Hibernian Chronicle" a weekly
history
column in the Irish Echo by
Edward
T. O'Donnell
94 Years Ago
Mary, Mary
Edward T. O'Donnell * The Irish Echo * August 2, 2000
Ninety-four years ago, on August 4, 1906, the family of banker Charles
Henry Warren thought they had solved a big problem. Searching desperately
for a cook at the height of the summer season on Oyster Bay, they found
one who seemed perfect for the job. Mary Mallon had ample experience
and seemed pleasant enough. And best of all, she could start right
away. Unfortunately, it was what they didn’t know about Mallon that
mattered most: she was a carrier of typhoid bacilli.
Mary Mallon was born in 1869 in Cookstown, County Tyrone, Ireland and
migrated to New York City when she was fourteen years old. Like so
many Irish immigrant women, she took work as a cook in the homes of wealthy
Americans. Somewhere along the line, she became one of those rare people
who carried the bacilli that caused typhoid fever but was herself immune
to it.
Mallon’s trouble began three weeks after starting work for the Warrens
when eleven people were stricken with typhoid fever. Everyone recovered,
but the owner of the house feared he might not be able to rent it again
if he didn’t discover the source of the outbreak. So he hired George
Soper, a sanitation engineer and natural-born detective to investigate.
When Soper found nothing wrong with the water system, he honed in on the
new cook hired just weeks before the outbreak. But by then Mary Mallon
had disappeared.
For the next six months Soper searched for the elusive cook. Finally,
he located her at a posh Park Avenue home where an outbreak of typhoid
had just been reported. Soper had her arrested and subsequent tests
indicated that she was, “a living culture.”
Mallon refused to cooperate, citing her good health, and demanded to
be released. Instead, they packed her off to the contagious disease
hospital located on North Brother Island near the Bronx.
By then she was infamous. The press dubbed her “Typhoid Mary”
and little children ran about the streets shouting “Mary, Mary, what do
you carry.” Mary Mallon, an anonymous Irish woman, had suddenly become
a vivid symbol of the growing national fear of immigrants as subversive
and dangerous.
After three years, she finally convinced officials to release her on
the condition that she never again work as a cook and that she check in
regularly with Board of Health officials. Instead she disappeared
to ply the only trade she knew. Five years later she was arrested
while working at a maternity hospital where typhoid fever had just broken
out. This time public health officials sent her back to the North
Brother Island hospital for good. Embittered and lonely, Mary Mallon
would spend the next 23 years living as a “special guest” in a small cottage
on the island. To the end she refused to believe that she was a carrier
or that she had infected anyone.
In all Mallon infected at least 51 people (three of whom died), and
possibly as many as 1,400. She was not the only carrier discovered,
nor was she necessarily the worst. But she was without a doubt
the most infamous.
Hibernian History This Week
August 2, 1943: The Japanese destroyer Amigiri rams and sinks PT 109.
Despite a back injury that would plague him for the rest of his life, Lieutenant
John F. Kennedy and ten crewmen survive the ordeal. Cliff Robertson would
later star as JFK in the 1963 film, "PT 109."
August 3, 1916: Convicted of treason for his role in plotting the Easter
Rising, Roger Casement is hanged.
August 8, 1934: Bing Crosby becomes the first singer to record for the
newly created Decca Records. His songs, “Just A-Wearyin’ For You” and “I
Love You Truly,” are instant hits, boosting his career and helping guarantee
the famous record label’s success.
Hibernians Born This Week:
August 2, 1924: Emmy Award-winning actor, Carroll O’Connor, in New York
City.
August 3, 1823: Irish revolutionary, Union Army general, and Governor
of the Montana Territory, Thomas Francis Meagher, in Waterford.
August 6, 1775: Irish patriot and MP, Daniel O’Connell, near Cahersiveen,
County Kerry.
August 7, 1890: Radical labor leader, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, in Concord,
NH.
(c) Edward T. O'Donnell, 2000
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