Share This Episode
Our American Stories Lee Habeeb Logo

Dreaded Diseases of the Great Depression

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
January 16, 2026 3:03 am

Dreaded Diseases of the Great Depression

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

00:00 / 00:00
On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 4144 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


January 16, 2026 3:03 am

During the 1920s, the Goff and Wilson families suffered through severe cases of the Spanish influenza, whooping cough, and the mumps, which led to the loss of two five-week-old twins and a young mother. The family's struggles during the Great Depression and their resilience in the face of hardship are a testament to the strength of American families.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:
The Masculine Journey Podcast Logo
The Masculine Journey
Sam Main
Love Worth Finding Podcast Logo
Love Worth Finding
Adrian Rogers
Cross Reference Radio Podcast Logo
Cross Reference Radio
Pastor Rick Gaston

This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed human. Support for the show comes from Public, the investing platform for those who take it seriously. On Public, you can build a multi-asset portfolio of stocks, bonds, options, crypto, and now generated assets, which allow you to turn any idea into an investable index with AI. It all starts with your prompt.

From renewable energy companies with high-free cash flow to semiconductor suppliers growing revenue over 20% year over year, you can literally type any prompt and put the AI to work. It screens thousands of stocks, builds a one-of-a-kind index, and lets you backtest it against the SP 500. Then you can invest in a few clicks. Generated assets are like EFTs with infinite possibilities, completely customizable and based on your thesis, not someone else's. Go to public.com/slash podcast and earn an uncapped 1% bonus when you transfer your portfolio.

That's public.com/slash podcast. Paid for by Public Investing, Brokerage Services by Open to the Public Investing Inc., member F-I-N-R-A-S-IPC. Advisory Services by Public Advisors LLC, SEC Registered Advisor. Generated assets is an interactive analysis tool. Output is for informational purposes only and is not investment recommendation or advice.

Complete disclosures available at public.com/slash disclosures. Want to buy your way? Of course, you do. That's why CarMax offers an experience designed just for you. Want to start online, then visit the lot, then go back online?

Sure. Want to talk to a real person or chat online? Either works. Want to take your time and compare all the makes and models? No problem.

Then make up some time by filling out the paperwork at home and schedule express pickup or home delivery? Done. When it comes to how you buy, CarMax puts you in the driver's seat. Want to drive? CarMax.

Delivery restrictions apply. See CarMax.com for details.

So you want to start a business? You might think you need a team of people and fancy tech skills, but you don't. You just need GoDaddy Arrow. I'm Walton Goggins, and as an actor, I'm an expert in looking like I know what I'm doing. GoDaddy Arrow uses AI to create everything you need to grow a business.

It'll make you a unique logo. It'll create a custom website. It'll write social posts for you and even set you up with a social media calendar. Get started at godaddy.com slash arrow. That's godaddy.com slash a i r o well the holidays have come and gone once again, but if you've forgotten to get that special someone in your life a gift, well, Mint Mobile is extending their holiday offer of half off unlimited wireless.

So here's the idea. You get it now. You call it an early present for next year. What do you have to lose? Give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch.

Limited time, 50% off regular price for new customers. Up from payment required, $45 for three months, $90 for six months, or $180 for a 12-month plan. Taxes and fees extra. Speeds may slow after 50 gigabytes per month when network is busy. See terms.

And we return to our American Stories. Up next, a story from our regular contributor, recipient of our Great American Storytelling Award and contest. and a friend of our show, Joy Neil Kidney. Joy is the author of Leora's Letters and Leora's Dexter Stories, two phenomenal books about her family's history. Today she shares with us a story entitled, Dreaded Diseases of the Great Depression.

Take it away, Joy. Have you ever heard of anyone dying from the mumps? Or whooping cough? Both profoundly affected Iowa's Goff and Wilson families. during the 1920s.

They had already suffered through severe cases of the so-called Spanish influenza. early in the decade. Leora? the oldest of Sheridan and Laura Goff's big family. was married to Clay Wilson.

They had three children by then. Her brother Jennings had returned from the Great War. and married Tess. A local Guthrie County girl. In 1921, Jennings and Tess had a daughter, Maxine, who was born the same spring as the Wilson twins.

Three years later, Tess gave birth to a son, both Tess and baby Meryl. came down with the mouse. Meryl was just four days old. when his mother died. Jennings and his two small children began to make their home with his parents, Sherd and Laura.

When the Wilson family moved to Dexter, the Goffs moved there as well. Along with many others, both families had lost their farms after the Great War. Having been encouraged to go into debt for land, They were shocked. that farm prices severely slumped. Clay Wilson hired out as a tenant farmer, but when that soured, the family moved to the edge of Dexter, where they could at least keep their cow.

By 1928, farm jobs had dried up. along with the Wilson's cow. Claibes sold the cow for $75. By then, they had seven children. They made out a large order to Sears, Roebuck and Company, for food in bulk, including oatmeal.

Gallons of sorghum. Large jars of peanut butter, clothes, boots, winter coats. and one Christmas present for each youngster. Bleak days of winter were upon them. Leora was in a family way again.

Will the baby do soon? In January of 1929, twins Jack and Jean were born. The babies were about three weeks old. When the family moved from the outskirts of Dexter, into a drap green house, on the street just south of the home of the extended Gough family. The Wilson youngsters look forward to having cousins Maxine and Meryl as their neighbors.

Right away Claib set up a stove in the new house and laid a fire.

so it would be warm when the youngest ones arrived. A few kids at a time rode in the Model T with their mother's stickery asparagus fern, and other house plants, and dozens of mason jars filled with whatever Leora had been able to preserve from the garden. All nine children, even the babies, came down with colds. It was not long before their coughs grew serious. with a deep telltale croup.

A doctor confirmed, indeed, they had all come down with whooping cough. A quarantine sign was posted on the front door. as the disease spreads very easily. Clave and Leora, who'd both had whooping cough as children, strewed newspapers upstairs on the wooden floors beside the children's beds. with ashes in the centre to catch the flame that they spit up.

short of breath after deep coughing. The kids would fall to their knees and gasp for air. Donald fainted during a coughing episode. Newspapers covered the downstairs floors as well. What a miserable time for the entire family.

Uh Every morning Claib gathered up those stench field newspapers, to burn in the stove. and arranged fresh ones on the floors. Every few days, Leora sent the children upstairs to snuggle under blankets in bed to stay warm. while she aired out the house, scoured everything, and mopped the floors with disinfectant. When the stove warmed up the kitchen again, she called the youngstress come down.

The room smelled so clean and medicinate, Darling remembered that decades later. The seven-year-old felt warm and safe. crouched behind the wood stove. One night, Claib heard scuffling and squeaking of bedsprings overhead. Dale was nearly unconscious in the dishevelled bed.

with his head caught in the curves of the wrought iron headboard, The boy was too weak to free himself. Clay went for the doctor who prescribed medicine for Dale. who had developed pneumonia. and also checked Doris's bloodshot eye. She had coughed so hard that her blood vessel broke, The doctor said to use eye drops, probably boric acid.

Those baby twins gasped and cried. They gagged when Leora tried to nurse them. The harried parents held them upside down, using fingers to work phlegm from their tiny mouths.

So that Claiba and Leora could get some rest, Jenningscoff, who had had disease as a child, stayed with the Wilsons at night to help. Pertussis or whooping cough is most dangerous in infants. The doctor suggested spooning a little whiskey down their throats to try to clear them. But it didn't do any good. Baby Jack died.

Then two days later, so did Jean. They were five weeks old. The local newspaper noted that the school had sent a bouquet. and so had the Rebecca Lodge. of which grandmother was a member.

Neighbors had taken up a collection for flowers. Carnations. the spicy scent of carnations forever after, would take Doris back to when she was ten years old. and the funeral for the baby twins. Called the 100-day cough, the miserable disease can last weeks.

Dubbert and Donald were in the eighth grade. and ended up missing a whole grading period at school. There was talk about holding them back a year. but they wanted to graduate with their classmates. The teachers agreed that if the boys would double down on their studies and take a special test, They could graduate.

which they did. These days, most of us have gotten the DTP vaccination. which protects against diphtheria, tetanus, and and whooping cough. A Mumps vaccine wasn't developed until nineteen sixty seven. These days, it's hard to imagine the loss of a young mother to mumps.

or to imagine the hardship of caring for nine children, with such a dreadful disease as whooping cough. than losing infants because of it. And a beautiful job on the production by Monty Montgomery, and a special thanks to Joy Neil Kidney. for sharing so many of the stories of her family. and it's hard to remember what life was like before we were here.

As a comedian recently said, there was life before us. And before you. And my goodness, when my dad and I would travel around the country, we'd always go to Civil War battlefields and on the graveyards and cemeteries. And always there would be these little plots. Little baby plots, every family losing a three-year-old, a one-year-old, miscarriages, the amount of death.

Experienced by families, and right here in this one family, losing two five-week olds. whooping cough and having to bury those little babies. A remarkable story about America living through hard times, farming life. Falling prices, the Great Depression, no jobs, bleak winter months, mason jars. and, my goodness, a stove that warmed the house.

And reminding us what America was and still is, families still loved. And family still lived and thrived. The story of America, the story of Des Moines, and Joy Neil Kidney's family here. are now American stories. This is Richard Sherman from the Richard Sherman Podcast.

Ready or Not is the tactical first person shooter where you take command of a SWAT team and every decision matters. I reunited with my Legion of Boom teammates Cam Chancellor, Cliff Favrell, Michael Bennett and Walter Thurman to go through real SWAT training and see why over thirteen million players are into this game. Watch our training now at Richard Sherman Podcast YouTube channel. This isn't mindless run and gun. The game demands elite teamwork and sharp strategic thinking.

Just like what the Legion of Boom brought to the field every single game. Try the limited time free trial on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X and S. Play now and feel the weight of the badge. Are you looking for entertainment that lifts you up? Then check out Up Faith and Family, the leading streaming service for inspiring, hope-filled shows and movies.

This season streams soul-stirring favorites like Southern Gospel, plus four full seasons of Jesus Calling, and the uplifting new faith series These Stones. Or settle in with 19 seasons of the beloved family series Heartland, a family favorite ranch drama fans can't get enough of. It's commercial free. Stream anywhere. To get a free trail today, go to upfaithandfamily.com slash iHeart.

After the holidays, your brain wants one thing, less. Less noise, less clutter, less doing. Pura helps you reset your space with premium smart home fragrance. No complicated routine required. Right now, you can get a free Pura 4 home diffuser when you subscribe for 12 months.

Set schedules, adjust intensity, and come home to calm on your terms. This offer won't last. Get your free diffuser at pura.com. For the first time ever, a truly beautiful medical breakthrough promises physical perfection. One shot makes you hot, but with terrifying consequences.

In the new original series, FX is the Beauty. The glamorous world of supermodels turns deadly as mysterious deaths draw in FBI agents and a shadowy billionaire who will stop at nothing to protect his empire. From executive producer Ryan Murphy, FX is the Beauty premieres January 21st on FX, Hulu, and Hulu on Disney Plus for bundle subscribers. This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed human.

Mm-hmm.

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime