Friday, August 2, 2019

NIGHTMARE ON TROOPSHIP

Details of an outbreak of  deadly  Spanish Flu  aboard  the Australian troopship  HMAT Boonah in 1918  are  revealed in the latest  edition of  Progenitor , journal of  the  Genealogical Society of the Northern Territory (GSNT).
 
With more than 900 soldiers aboard  , the ship left Adelaide  on October  22   bound   for  the  war ; on arriving  at Durban , South Africa,  word came through of  the  Armistice , so arrangements were made for  the ship  to  return  home .
 
While tied up in Durban , stevedores , some  unknowingly  infected with Spanish Flu ,    loaded  supplies  and  slept aboard the  ship .   Five days  on  the return voyage  , during rough seas   and cold weather , the troops in close confinement , flu symptoms   began to appear . 
 
The first casualty was  Sergeant   Arthur Charles  Thwaites  who jumped overboard  on the night of  December 9 , a  Court of Enquiry  found that he committed suicide  most  likely  as a result of  being  delirious  from  the flu .
 
When the ship arrived in Fremantle  on  December  12,  more than 300 cases had been reported  , authorities refused  permission  for   the soldiers  to disembark  because of  the  fear  about the raging   global  pandemic , not then  evident in WA .
 
Eventually   nearly 300  sick men  were  taken to the  quarantine station  at Woodman Point  , south of Fremantle .  There were three deaths  the  first day at the station . The  situation continued to deteriorate  with  more deaths  and more than  20 nursing and medical  staff  becoming   infected.  By December  20, there were more than  600  soldiers  at  the  station .
 
The magazine account   says  conditions    for  those still aboard the  ship were   believed to be deplorable . Public outrage   grew against   refusal  of the immigration  authorities  to bring all  troops  ashore  , the   ship  described  as   a "  disease stricken   cubby-hole  of a  floating   hell. " There  were   threats  to storm  the  ship  and bring the    sick  men  to shore .
 
After nine days of "acrimony" , despite  quarantine restrictions ,  the ship sailed   east , another  17 cases  discovered   between Albany and Adelaide  , the remainder  disembarked  at  Torrens  Island  quarantine station .
 
A total of  27 soldiers  and four  nurses    died at  Woodman Island   and were buried there .
 
One of those  aboard the  ship  was  Vernon  Lionel Marsh , born  in Darwin ,  who  apparently  put up  his  age , making out he was  over  18 ,  to enlist;  he  survived   the ordeal  aboard HMAT Boonah  and  signed up for  WWll .  At one stage he managed  the  Memorial Club  in  Alice  Springs in  the early  l950s  .
 
 The  Boonah Tragedy , by Ian Darroch ,  was published in  2004 .  The Boonah was  sold to a German company  in 1925  and  torpedoed by a British submarine  in WWll.   The  article ,  by  Garey Neenan ,  says  Spanish  Flu infected about 500 million people  between  January 1918 and  December  1920 , leading   to 50-100 million deaths , or about   four per cent  of the world's population .