Tucked away at the end of the
earth, New Zealand and Australia have, happily, been relatively unscathed by the
Covid-19 pandemic. There have been 22 deaths in New Zealand and 119 in
Australia. Eight former typewriter-producing nations – the US, Brazil, Britain,
Mexico, Italy, France and India – have between them suffered way more than
two-thirds of the total global deaths of more than 600,000. Things were very
different during the “Spanish” flu pandemic of 1918-19, when the virus was spread by sea
travel to the four corners of the world, and to places were medical science wasn't what it is today. Countries like Australia and Norway,
for example, had 15,000 deaths, or 2.5 per cent of total US “Spanish” flu deaths, and
New Zealand 9000 deaths, 1.5 per cent. With Codic-19, that figure is at
present, in Australia, 0.085 per cent, in New Zealand 0.016 per cent, and in
Norway 0.18 per cent.
Sigurd Mathisen, Norwegian world champion speed skater and typewriter salesman,
who died of the "Spanish" flu.
The
“Spanish” flu had a massive impact on the worldwide typewriter trade, of
course, and I mention Norway here because among the many people in the industry
who died from the “Spanish” flu was world ice skating speed champion and world
record holder Sigurd Valdemar Mathisen, who succumbed to the flu on March 4,
1919, aged just 35. Mathisen had worked as a typewriter salesman for nine years
for Thore Bjerke Grüner (1877-1928), who was the Underwood typewriter agent in
Christiania (now Olso), the capital of Norway. Bjerke Grüner’s headquarters
were at 5 Prinsens Gate, where the second floor windows were emblazoned with
the Underwood Typewriter Company logo.
The Underwood logos in the windows of Bjerke Grüner's offices.
The building at 5 Prinsens Gate, in what is now Oslo. The building still stands (below):
Dozens of boxes of Underwood typewriters
lined up on horsedrawn wagons for delivery to Bjerke Grüner's establishment.
Mathisen
won the 1904 world all-round speed skating championship at the Gamle Frogner
Stadium in Christiania in February 1904, contested over 500, 1500, 5000 and
10,000 metres. At Davos in Switzerland in 1908, Mathisen equalled the world
record of 44.4 seconds over 500 metres, a time improved in 1912 by Mathisen’s
younger brother Oscar.
Another
Norwegian typewriter dealer – in his case the Fox - who fell victim to the
“Spanish” flu was John Milne Grieg of Bergen, who died on November 6, 1918,
aged 48. Grieg had the misfortune of being married to a woman called Trumpy.
In
the United States, “Spanish” flu deaths included those of the Corona Typewriter
Company’s Groton office manager William Wallou Gilbert on October 4, 1918, aged
32. Gilbert had caught the flu while on vacation in Jamaica, Queens, New York. Another victim was
Charles Ridgely White, in Baltimore on October 4, 1918, his 37th birthday.
Back then it was the typewriter. Today the computer.
ReplyDeleteThe Spanish flu that probably started at an Army base in the USA. Sad that the USA has not learned from its past.
Interesting, as always, Robert, thank you! Doing research for my forthcoming book on Swiss ribbon tins I came across another victim of the Spanish flu: Max Muggli, from Zurich. He was an important representative of L. C. Smith in Europe (then based in Basel), before joining his father Jakob Muggli at the general agency for Underwood in Germany. Cut down in the prime of his life, his death left Jakob without a successor within the family, thus closing the Underwood chapter for the Muggli family in Germany after Jakob's retirement. Other branches of the Muggli clan kept thriving, and it will be one of the most interesting chapters of my book.
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