John Singer Sargent (1856–1925), Interior of a Hospital Tent, 1918. Watercolor over
pencil on paper; 16 in × 21 in/39 cm × 53 cm. Imperial War Museums, © IWM ART 1611,
Lambeth Road, London SE1 6HZ, England, UIK
The generation that endured through what was perhaps the most devastating epidemic
ever—the great influenza pandemic of 1918—is now gone. The influenza strain of that
pandemic infected about 500 million people, one third of the world’s population, with
extraordinarily high pathogenicity and virulence. The result was staggering mortality:
an estimated 20 to 100 million lives were lost worldwide. The estimate of deaths of
Americans attributable to influenza in that pandemic is 675,000, the majority of which
were among those from ages 20 through 40 years. During World War I, the “Great War,”
influenza-associated mortality waves occurred in northern Europe, beginning in early
summer of 1918 and extending over the course of year; influenza accounted for more
fatalities than military engagement. The highest point of combined influenza and pneumonia
mortality occurred in October 1918. At the time, the pandemic strain became known
as “the Spanish flu,” so called because neutral Spain lacked war censors and was the
first country to report on the pandemic publicly; however, the geographic origin of
the causative organism remains an enigma.
Among that generation was the artist John Singer Sargent, who was born in Florence
in 1856 and raised principally in France, the child of two Americans: an eye doctor
turned medical illustrator father, and an amateur artist mother. Home-schooled and
trained at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, he enjoyed a storied career, principally
as a portraitist. In early summer 1918, late in his renowned career when living in
England, Sargent was invited back to France on commission by British Prime Minister
Lloyd George, Field Marshal Douglas Haig, and the British Department of Information,
War Memorials Committee, to depict the Anglo-American effort in the war.
During late September, while preparing sketches for his iconic painting Gassed in
a military camp near Roisel (Péronne), Sargent fell ill with influenza. Sargent was
cared for and convalesced in a hospital tent in France. He wrote that he lay there,
“with the accompaniment of groans of wounded, and the chokings and coughing of gassed
men, which was a nightmare. It always seemed strange on opening one’s eyes to see
the level cots and the dimly lit long tent looking so calm, when one was dozing in
pandemonium.”
Sargent’s hospital experience inspired the image featured on this month’s cover, Interior
of a Hospital Tent. This watercolor depicts the interior of a hospital tent with military
cots arrayed in file on the side, covered with blankets in a mix of red (contagious
cases) and brown (convalescing or noninfluenza cases), two colors that must have dominated
the entire war hospital environment. The scene is actually one of tranquility, a respite
from the chaos and carnage of war. In one bed, a soldier lies reading, his head bolstered
by pillows; in another, a soldier sleeps on his side with an open tent flap behind
him, his bed bathed in light from the world of the healthy. Beyond them, there are
three or four more cots with soldiers reclining in varying amounts of darkness and
light. Above all, in varying shades of military brown, is a great propped tent canopy.
Sargent remained hospitalized for a week, but unlike so many of the much younger soldiers,
he recovered and returned to his task of documenting what he saw. At the outset of
his journey through France in July 1918, he had written that the best material for
his commission would be to see “a big road encumbered with troop and traffic…combining
English and Americans.” By mid-October in northern France, Sargent had had his fill
of war. He wrote, “I have wasted lots of time going to the front trenches. There is
nothing to paint there—it is ugly, meagre, and cramped…. I have seen what I wanted,
roads crammed with troops on the march. It is the finest spectacle that war affords…”
By the end of October, Sargent returned to Britain to complete the several works for
which he had been commissioned. What he had seen firsthand and documented from his
experiences in the conflict were the amplification mechanisms for infectious disease
transmission that war provides: crowding, migration, and poor ventilation and sanitation.
Because there were no vaccines available with proven safety and efficacy to protect
against influenza and no antibiotics to treat secondary bacterial infections from
influenza or wounds, there were few public health measures available to counter the
spread and devastation of the pandemic.
Whether the great pandemic tipped the balance of power toward the cause of the Allies,
such that surrender came in November 1918, remains a matter of debate. The theory
that one conflict had a significant impact on the outcome of the other is supported
by data published from archives in Austria (Price-Smith 2008), which indicate that
waves of morbidity and mortality from influenza were experienced both to a larger
extent and earlier among the Central Powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman
Empire, and Bulgaria) than among the Allies. Unfortunately, the pandemic was not limited
in its geographic reach, and through 1920, it exerted a tremendous toll on morbidity
and mortality and created economic and social burdens, both elsewhere in Europe and
throughout the Americas, Africa, Asia, Australia, and the Pacific.