one hundred years ago, canada was being ravaged by the worst single disaster in its history. in the space of a few months, 50,000 canadians were struck down by spanish influenza — roughly the same number as the country’s entire first world war military deaths. if such an outbreak were to strike modern canada in equal proportions, it would kill at least 221,000.incredibly, the trauma of the spanish influenza has been almost completely forgotten. the disaster has few memorials, no dedicated museum and in most canadian history books it receives only the barest mention.but the canadians of 1918 did not experience the 1918 pandemic as a forgettable footnote to the first world war. they saw, smelled and experienced the disease for what it was: the fastest and most violent loss of civilian life in modern times.below, a few of the overlooked horrors from the pandemic of a century ago.
soldiers returned from the war to find most of their families deadcanadian soldier arthur lapointe was climbing out of a dugout on the western front when the spanish flu struck him with the force of a bullet. “as i reach the top my head swims with sudden nausea, everything around me whirls, i falter, then fainting, fall headlong to the ground … i feel sick and think i am going to die,” he
wrote later.lapointe was among 45,000 deployed canadian soldiers stricken with the flu, of whom more than 700 would die. the disease was so brutal that, according to historian tim cook, many soldiers compared it to the aftermath of a poison gas attack. lapointe recovered, but only when he returned home did he discover that three of his brothers and two of his sisters had died of the same disease.
flu chewed so violently through the stanley cup finals that they had to be cancelledfor the year 1919, a cryptic “series not completed” is etched on the stanley cup. through four years of war, the stanley cup finals had continued unabated. whole hockey teams had signed up for the army en masse, but leagues were nevertheless able to keep together just enough players to keep the sport going. but even hockey could not conquer flu. in the spring of 1919 the montreal canadiens had played five games against the seattle metropolitans for control of the cup. hours before the decisive sixth game, however, flu scythed into both teams. all but four of the canadiens were unable to leave their beds, and the disease would ultimately kill defenceman joe hall.