Thursday, September 2, 2004 FEATURE Southern Cross, Page 3 “Death and sickness have left only one Catholic priest at his post in Savannah” Y Twenty-two years after the deaths of Bishops nun was “a native of Augusta, Georgia; was Francis X. Gartland and Edward Barron during eighteen years of age and had entered on the Savannah’s 1854 yellow fever epidemic, another second year of novitiate. Her name in the world wave of the fever claimed the lives of many reliwas Miss Kate Lysaught. Blessed are the dead gious of the next generation. On October 16, who die in the Lord.” 1876, the Savannah Morning News carried an Sister Mary Joseph McGrath of the White alarming dispatch from the Charleston News Bluff orphanage run by the Sisters of Mercy, and Courier confirming the seriousness of the was thirty-four when she died of yellow fever on situation: “The news has been received that October 24, 1877, a year after the epidemic death and sickness have left only one Catholic peaked. The author of Catholicity in the Caropriest at his post in Savannah. Rev. John linas and Georgia, Father J. J. O’Connell, states Schachte of Charleston will go at once to that the unfortunate sister contracted yellow the stricken city.” fever while residing at Port Royal. Though the 1854 Savannah epidemic Priests which killed Bishop Gartland and his Father J. B. Langlois, a native of friend, Bishop Barron, claimed close Canada, was appointed pastor of the Cato a thousand lives, the 1066 fatalities thedral of Saint John the Baptist in May, tallied during the 1876 outbreak of 1876, while Bishop William H. Gross, CSSR, was traveling in Europe. Formerly yellow fever in Savannah surpassed that pastor of Saint Hubert’s Church in number. Present in other parts of the Rita H. DeLorme Montreal, and later professor of theology state besides Savannah, the fever at Pio Nono College in Macon and pastor felled priests and sisters who tended at Milledgeville, Father Langlois died on the sick. Yellow fever infection produced unmisOctober 14, 1876, three days after being stricken takable, devastating symptoms: fever, pain, proswith yellow fever. The Savannah Morning News tration, yellowing of the eyes, the signature commended Langlois’ “sincerity, zeal and devo“black vomit,” hemorrhages, and kidney and tion” and his “continuous labors in the care of brain damage. the charge imposed upon him.” and numbered Victims were sisters and priests him among the first to visit local yellow fever Among religious known to have contracted sufferers. yellow fever during the 1870s were Sisters Mary A Philadelphian, Father James A. Kelly, was Martha Manning, Mary Berchman Wheeler (or ordained by Bishop William H. Gross, at the Whelan), Mary Blandina Lysaught, and Mary Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist on March 12, Joseph McGrath, and Fathers J.B. Langlois, 1876. It was a halcyon year for the youthful and James A Kelly, James Murphy, Stephen Beyvisionary Bishop Gross, still in his thirties. tagh, John O’Neill, Gabriel Bergier, OSB, and Bernard Barron, OSF. Neither he nor Father Kelly could have foreseen Sisters that, by summer 1876, Savannah and other parts Their sacrifice long overlooked, these heroic of the diocese would be battling yellow fever. religious of the diocese merit further identificaEqually unforeseeable was the tragedy of the tion. Sister Mary Martha Manning, of the Order young priest’s death seven months after his ordiof Saint Agnes, died of yellow fever on Septemnation, on October 15, 1876. Father Kelly, 23, ber 26, 1876, nine days after her arrival in Sawas buried at the Cathedral Cemetery as the vannah. A native of Fon du Lac, Wisconsin, Catholic Cemetery was then called. Sister Mary Martha was twenty-two when she Father Kelly’s contemporary, Father James received the last rites of the church from Father Murphy, died at Macon on July 29, 1877, in a P. J. O’Keefe. continuum of the 1876 epidemic. A native of Sister Mary Berchman Wheeler (as listed by Liscarrol, Ireland, James Murphy studied at All several sources) or Whalen (as set in stone upon Hallows and was ordained on January 14, 1877. her grave), was a native of New York State, who Like Father Kelly, Father Murphy was only lived in Savannah from childhood. Sister Berseven months into his ministry. He was mourned chman, nineteen years old, was studying at the deeply by his parishioners. convent of the Sisters of Mercy when she died The death of Father Stephen Beytagh, another of yellow fever on October 14, 1876. victim of yellow fever, was erroneously attribSister Mary Blandina Lysaught succumbed to uted to his having anointed a woman from Sayellow fever on October 9, 1876, at the convent vannah who had the disease. The first resident of the Sisters of Mercy in Savannah. Sister pastor of Albany, Beytagh, 24, was at this post Blandina’s obituary notice (Savannah Morning for scarcely a year when he died on October 5, News, October 10, 1876) relates that the young 1876 in Americus. A native Savannahian, Father Photo courtesy of the Diocesan Archives ellow fever epidemics in Savannah and neighboring cities often began in the steamy days of summer and ended in the waning days of fall. The fever was thought to be contagious, to waft in on impure air, to travel via the U.S. mails and—closer to the truth—to lurk in swamps or rice fields. Benevolent associations offered assistance to its victims and, as of 1878, the United States Post Office fumigated letters sent from cities where the disease was rampant. Supposed “remedies” for the killer disease included the wearing of Holman’s Preventative Pad or dosing with Simmons’ Liver Regulator. Bishop William H. Gross, CSSR, was Bishop of Savannah during the outbreak of Yellow Fever in 1876. Beytagh is buried at the Catholic Cemetery a short distance from the rows of simple headstones which mark the graves of other deceased priests of the Savannah Diocese. Unlike Father Beytagh, little is known about Father John O’Neil, who died of yellow fever early on in the epidemic. Father O’Neil died on February 17, 1876, shortly after his ordination at Pio Nono College, Macon. Order priests whose deaths are attributed to the yellow fever epidemic of 1876 include the stalwart missioner, Father Gabriel Bergier, OSB, who was 37 years old when he died on October 4, 1876, and the Father Bernardine Barron, OSF, who died on November 6, 1876, of yellow fever and was buried in Savannah. A single, deadly bite Priests and sisters of the Diocese of Savannah who lost their lives to yellow fever in the mid1870s suffered and died years before their true killer was tagged: the female aedis aegypti mosquito. It was this insect, breeding in standing water, which was able to end the promising lives of these religious with as little as a single, deadly bite. RITA H. DELORME is a volunteer in the Diocesan Archives. }
© Copyright 2024