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Date of birth: 25 June 1887
Place of birth: Baltimore, Maryland
Parents: William Jubb
Mary R. Tibbets
Spouse: 11 December 1912: Edna E. Dorsey
Children: 1 December, 1913: Catherine Jubb
Dateof death: 14 October 1918
Place of death: Baltimore, Maryland
Date of burial: 18 October 1918
Place of interment: Mount Olivet Cemetery
Baltimore, Maryland
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Biography: Frank Jubb was born in Baltimore, Maryland to William and Mary (Tibbets) Jubb in June of 1887. He met and
married Edna E. Dorsey. They were married on December 11, 1912. They had one child together (Catherine Jubb). They were married
for a little over six years when he died of influenza. he was buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery in Baltimore
In the fall of 1918 the Great War in Europe was winding down and peace was on the horizon. The Americans had
joined in the fight, bringing the Allies closer to victory against the Germans. Deep within the trenches these men lived through
some of the most brutal conditions of life, which it seemed could not be any worse. Then, in pockets across the globe, something
erupted that seemed as benign as the common cold. The influenza of that season, however, was far more than a cold. In the
two years that this scourge ravaged the earth, a fifth of the world's population was infected. The flu was most deadly for
people ages 20 to 40. This pattern of morbidity was unusual for influenza which is usually a killer of the elderly and young
children. It infected 28% of all Americans (Tice). An estimated 675,000 Americans died of influenza during the pandemic, ten
times as many as in the world war. Of the U.S. soldiers who died in Europe, half of them fell to the influenza virus and not
to the enemy (Deseret News). An estimated 43,000 servicemen mobilized for WWI died of influenza (Crosby). 1918 would go down
as unforgettable year of suffering and death and yet of peace. As noted in the Journal of the American Medical Association
final edition of 1918:
"The 1918 has gone: a year momentous as the termination of the most cruel war in the annals of the human race; a year
which marked, the end at least for a time, of man's destruction of man; unfortunately a year in which developed a most fatal
infectious disease causing the death of hundreds of thousands of human beings. Medical science for four and one-half years
devoted itself to putting men on the firing line and keeping them there. Now it must turn with its whole might to combating
the greatest enemy of all--infectious disease," (12/28/1918).
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