In 1918, Minnesota and its residents were confronted with a series of
devastating events that put communities to the test, forcing them to
persevere through untold hardship. First, as the nation immersed itself
in the global conflict later known as World War I, some 118,000
Minnesotans served in the war effort, both at home and "over there"-and
citizens on the home front were subjected to loyalty tests and new
depths of government surveillance. While more than 1,400 Minnesotans
were killed on the battlefields, an additional 2,300 soldiers were
struck down by another destructive force working its way across the
globe in 1918: the influenza pandemic, which left more than 10,000 dead
in Minnesota alone. Then, in mid-October, fires raged across 1,500
square miles in seven counties of northeastern Minnesota, leaving
thousands homeless and hundreds dead.
In Minnesota, 1918, journalist and author Curt Brown explores this
monumental year through individual and community stories from all over
the state, from residents of small towns up north obliterated by the
fire, to government officials in metropolitan centers faced with the
spread of a deadly and highly contagious disease, to soldiers returning
home to all this from the "war to end all wars."