No. 211.
Mr. Sargent to Mr. Frelinghuysen.
[Extract.]
Legation of
the United States,
Berlin, October 26, 1883.
(Received November 12.)
No. 208.]
Sir: I am now able to transmit the able report of
Mr. W. C. Fox, consul at Brunswick, made in response to my request of the
21st instant, in obedience to your telegraphic instruction received here on
the night of the 20th.
Mr. Fox intelligently followed the directions given to him, and was furnished
every facility by the local authorities, whose courtesy towards him was most
marked.
I refer the Department to his inclosed report for a full statement of the
origin, nature, and extent of the disease. It may be briefly stated that the
fully ascertained cause of the epidemic was the consumption, mostly in an
entirely raw and partly in a partially raw condition, of the flesh of three
hogs raised in the vicinity, mixed with that of a Hungarian hog. The
extraordinary spread of the disease, through five villages in a circuit of 2
miles, occurred because the potato harvest was in progress, and it was
customary for the people to eat raw meat and bread in the field at such
times instead of spending time to go to and return from their homes. The
inspection is alleged by the inspector and butcher to have been made in
accordance with the law, though the record required by law was not properly
kept. The inspector was the village barber, the person habitually employed
in Germany for such inspections, who passes an examination as to his fitness
for the task. But the three preparations made for microscopic inspection,
under the law, are not sufficient to give safe results, as trichinӕ are
sometimes found only after thirty or forty trials. The only safeguard of the
consumer against the disease is thorough cooking, and this is ample.
The whole number of cases so far is about 438, of which 36 have been fatal
and 19 more probably will be fatal.
I learn from another source, outside of this report of Mr. Fox, from an
eye-witness who is fully reliable, that the scenes at Ermesleben are
distressing in the highest degree. My informant entered one house where the
grandmother, father, and son lay dead, and a daughter, about eighteen years
of age, lay sick. She is the only one of the family left, and may recover.
There are about 700 inhabitants in the village, living in about 120 houses.
There are 267 sick in 85 houses. Some of the people are in want, but the
community is rich, some of the peasants being worth $200,000 apiece. There
is a large kitchen where food is prepared for all the sick, for rich and
poor alike.
The sickness is accompanied by extreme exhaustion. Swollen extremities force
the patients to remain perfectly still for weeks, unless
[Page 399]
relieved from suffering by death, which is
caused directly by suffocation. These sad scenes lead to several
conclusions:
- 1st.
- American pork is exonerated from the suspicion of being the cause
of this disaster, and its prohibition by Germany upon the theory
that it is more harmful than other pork is unadvised. * * *
- 2d.
- The inspection laws of Germany are totally inadequate to prevent
such calamities so long as the people indulge the habit, which seems
to Americans nauseous, of eating pork raw.
- 3d.
- This epidemic is a terrible warning to Germany to abstain from
eating raw pork. In the language of Professor Hertwieg to the
convention of butchers of Berlin, in 1865, “You know what you have
to do in your kitchens, and if you do it properly we have no need of
inspection.”
The constant danger from native pork eaten in a raw state is shown by the
results following the prospect of local rewards given for the detection of
trichinӕ. I translate the two following announcements from a recent number
of the Halberstädter Intelligenzblatt, published in the infected
neighborhood, showing not only that the domestic article is highly
dangerous, but that the inspection contemplated by the law is insufficient:
Quedlinburg, October
14.
A reward of 30 marks of public money has been awarded to Inspector
Reder, at Gr. Schierstedt, for the discovery of trichinӕ in a hog
examined by him.
The magistrate of Quedlinburg has awarded a reward of 15 marks to the
inspector of meat, Julius Yrem, for the discovery of trichinӕ in a
pig slaughtered on the 29th ultimo.
An article published last spring in a newspaper of Berlin, which is usually
supposed to express official ideas, held to the view that the prohibitory
decree was proper, because a Government must recognize in its acts the
tastes of its people; that Germans like to eat pork raw, and hence the fact
that well-cooked pork is safe and uncooked pork dangerous does not make any
difference; the Government will keep out the American article because it is
dangerous in a raw state. The discussion of these events at Ermesleben in
the German papers has been quite restricted, and it seems to me there has
not been much disposition to draw the natural inferences, viz, that the
eating of raw pork of all nationalities should cease. * * *
I have thanked Mr. Fox for his interesting report, and will forward to the
Department the official statement of the local authorities to which he
alludes as soon as I receive it, and will also have inquiries made as to any
other neighborhood in which I may observe the disease stated to be
prevalent.
I have, &c.,
[Inclosure in No. 208.]
Consul Fox to Mr.
Sargent.
United
States Consulate,
Brunswick, October 25,
1883.
Sir: In compliance with your instructions I
visited the villages of Ermesleben and Deesdorf, in this consular
district, on October 23, and have now the honor to make the following
report upon the trichina epidemic prevailing in that vicinity.
Ermesleben, the place where the disease has taken most formidable
dimensions, is situated near the Harz Mountains, about five English
miles from the city of Halberstadt, in the province of Saxony. It
embraces in its confines some of the most fertile soil, and is one of
the most prosperous localities in the Prussian Kingdom.
[Page 400]
The scourge now raging there has awakened not only the heartfelt sympathy
of all, but the liveliest interest in medical circles, and the locality
is visited daily by physicians from abroad and others interested in
obtaining scientific information in regard to it. It has assumed such
proportions that it is absolutely impossible for the resident physicians
to attend to all the cases. Under the direction of privy counselor Prof.
Dr. Weber, of Halle, Mr. Wagner, a student of medicine, is on the spot
ministering to the wants of the sick and taking notes for the purpose of
future publication. To this gentleman, as well as to Mr. Pastor
Greiling, who is also unceasing in his attentions to the sufferers, and
to Mr. Amtmann Heine, magistrate of the village, I am indebted for many
courtesies shown, as well as for information in regard to and
opportunity to personally see many of the patients. The sickness was
first noticed in Ermesleben about September 16. Several persons were
taken suddenly ill with nausea and acute diarrhea. Medical aid was
obtained forthwith, and it was first thought that a cholera epidemic had
broken out (cholera nostras), until other
symptoms—swelling of the eyes, face, and extremities, combined with high
fever—showed that it was undoubtedly trichinosis. The disease spread
rapidly, and up to date 433 cases have been recorded; 36 have been
fatal, and upwards of 19 will undoubtedly prove so, as follows:
Places. |
Cases. |
Deaths. |
Probably
die. |
Ermesleben |
267 |
27 |
14 |
Nienhagen |
80 |
None. |
? |
Gröningen (Kloster) |
10 |
2 |
? |
Deesdorf |
40 |
7 |
5 |
|
397 |
36 |
19 |
|
433 |
|
In Nienhagen and Groningen the cases are much lighter than in Ermesleben,
and in all probability the patients will all recover. Several cases are
reported to exist in Wegeleben and Köthhof, though not over five in all.
All of the infected villages lie within a circuit of about two English
miles. I made Ermesleben and Deesdorf the basis of my investigation, and
was informed by the gentlemen with whom I conversed upon the subject
that I could learn nothing of further interest in the other places, as
all the parties competent to give me information were in Ermesleben at
the time.
When it became apparent that the disease was trichinosis the local
authorities immediately instituted a thorough investigation in the
endeavor to locate its origin.
It appears that on or about the 12th and 14th of September four swine
were butchered; the meat of all was mixed and sold to the inhabitants of
the infected districts. Three of the pigs were the so-called Landschwein (common kind reared in the vicinity),
the other was Baguner (Hungarian). The fact has
been established beyond all dispute that in all the cases the patients
had eaten the meat raw, either in the form of Klumpfleisch (raw chopped meat) or in the form of
Rothwurst (blood sausage). This latter
article is said to be cooked, but (my informant, Mr. Pastor Greiling,
assured me) so slightly as to have no effect whatever upon the trichinӕ
germs. The custom of eating raw swine’s meat is prevalent in the
neighborhood, and the first trichina epidemic occurred in 1865, though
it was not so disastrous as the on e now raging. The inhabitants caimed
then, as now, that the swine were not properly inspected. The country
folk have the idea that the examination, when conducted according to
law, gives them ample security. Dr. Wagner maintained to me, however,
that this is an erroneous supposition, and that the present law is very
defective. The law requires the inspector to make at least three
preparations for microscopic examination, and, as a rule, he rarely
makes more. It is asserted, however, that experiment has proved that the
trichinӕ are sometimes found only after the thirtieth or fortieth trial
respectively. In 1865 Professor Hertwieg, in an address delivered before
a convention of Berlin butchers, said, “You know what you have to do in
your kitchens, and if you do it properly we have no need for
inspection.”
I think that the whole case is here stated in a nut-shell, and Ermesleben
affords additional evidence of the truth of the statement. Mr. Amtmann
Heine, leaseholder of the Ermesleben estates, together with his family,
partook of the meat in cooked form. None of them have suffered in the
least. One of the kitchen maids, however, simply tasted of the raw meat
and is ill. The village tavern-keeper and his family also ate of the
cooked meat and are well and hearty. His little daughter ate some of it
raw at a neighbor’s home and became slightly infected. The sworn
official inspector, who is, by the way, the village barber in
Ermesleben, and the butcher, have been held to answer, and in the
preliminary examination, the charges of
[Page 401]
manslaughter, infliction of bodily injury, and
negligence in performance of duty have been preferred.
Under the law the butcher is required to notify the inspector when he has
slaughtered a pig. The inspection is then made, which consists simply in
making preparations for microscopic examination, as before stated; the
inspector then certifies to the facts as they may appear to him. If he
declares the animal to be clean, its meat can be sold for consumption.
The butcher, as well as the inspector, is required to keep a list of all
swine slaughtered and inspected. This list is at all times open to the
revision of the authorities. In the case in question it appears that
this list was not kept, or, if kept at all, so imperfectly as to be
wholly worthless as evidence. The delinquents made an effort to put it
in order, were detected and finally acknowledged it. They nevertheless
earnestly maintained that the inspection was made according to law. The
parties as well as their families are all sick; several members have
died,, and others are at the point of death. A circumstance which in a
measure explains-how it happened that the epidemic assumed such
formidable proportions in Ermesleben is the fact that it was the time of
the potato harvest, and the whole village,, young and old, men, women,
and children, were at work in the potato fields. At such times it is the
custom not to cook a midday meal, but, in order to save the time which
would otherwise be consumed in going and coming, to take a simple repast
composed of raw meat and bread. As a natural consequence the sickness
has caused great consternation in the community, and the people have
become doubly careful. As a result, according to the Halberstädter
Intelligenzblatt, several infected swine have been discovered. Mr.
Meinecke, a veterinary surgeon in Derenburg, succeeded in finding one,
and in his report makes the following suggestions:
- 1.
- In order to secure thorough inspection to offer a high premium
for every infected hog found.
- 2.
- Not to eat the raw meat.
- 3.
- To adopt measures, to prevent the swine becoming
infected.
In conclusion it is hardly necessary for me to mention that the local
authorities as well as private charity are doing all that human power
can do to relieve the present distress. I cannot, however, refrain, in
expressing my sincere thanks to Pastor Greiling and Mr. Wagner, to refer
to their untiring energy and self-sacrifice of personal interests, in
the work which they have on hand. Mr. Wagner is preparing an
exhaustive-report, which he has promised to send me when completed, and
I hope to be able to transmit same to you at an early day. While we
certainly deeply sympathize with this sadly afflicted community, it must
nevertheless be the source of peculiar satisfaction to our countrymen to
know that the malady was not caused by American meats. In fact, it has
not been even intimated that such a thing was possible, and there is no
evidence that American pork has ever been used there at all.
I have, &c.,
WILLIAM C. FOX,
United States
Consul.