In the "Little House" books, Laura writes about a fabric they called
"mosquito bar", which they put over the windows to try and keep the bugs
out. Does that count for costume/fabric content? :-)

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Leah L Watts
Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2008 6:37 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [h-cost] Re: Tudors & Sweating Sickness (OT)

 > Interesting.  My daughter mentioned malaria but I told her it 
> couldn't be that because it's tropical.  Cholera was mentioned as 
> well.  I was thinking along the lines of the horrible influenza in the 
> U.S. in 19...teens that killed so many.  Wasn't it called the Spanish 
> Influenza?

I've seen references to malaria in England in Victorian times, but don't
have the books handy right now.

And yes, the 1918 pandemic was known as the Spanish Flu (despite starting
out in Kansas, USA).  Sweating sickness doesn't quite match the 1918
symptoms ... but flu viruses are so mutable, you really can't go by that.

Costume content, costume content, there's gotta be some around here ...
"America's Forgotten Pandemic" has several references (and photos) of people
wearing gauze masks to protect themselves from the flu.  Anyone ever do a
Costume Con historical masquerade entry from 1918 with flu masks?  (It'll be
Milwaukee before I can go again, but I'm trying to decide on an entry
early.)

Leah
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