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- If you have corrections and/or updated information on this person please contact Roz Edson at MrsEdson@gmail.com
[[The following census information was compiled and contributed by Joyce S.
Calif. Death Records
Transcribed as Curtis Wilch
1900 Census: Los Angeles Ward 4, Los Angeles Co, California
Curtis Welch, Oct 1874, age 25, m ? mos, bp CT, f's bp CT, m's bp MA, Physician
Lula Welch, wife, Nov 1873, age 26, 0 births, bp IN, f's bp IN, m's bp KY
Inez, James, sis-in-law, Sept 1881, age 18, bp IN, f's bp IN, m's bp KY, has occ- too faded to read
1910 Census: Council, 2-Division, Alaska
Curtis W. Welch, Oct 1875, age 34, m 19 yrs, bp CT, p's bp CT, Physician
Lula Welch, wife, Nov 1873, age 36, 0 births, bp KY, p's bp KY
1920 Census: Cape Nome, Second Judicial District, Alaska
Curtis Welch, age 44, bp CT, f's bp CT, m's bp MA, Physician- Surgeon
Lulu James Welch, wife, age 44, bp Ky, p's bp KY
No others listed in household.
1930 Census: Oakland, Alameda Co, California
Dr. Curtis Welch, age 54, m at 24, bp CT, p's bp CT, Physician- industrial insurance?
Lula J. Welch, wife, age 55, m at 21, bp IN, p's bp KY
No others listed in household.
For info on Curtis Welch see>
http://serumrun.org/History.htm
http://www.iditarod.com/geninfo/serumrun.php
http://www.dogsled.com/cgi-bin/forums/YaBB.pl?action=display&board=Iditarod_Buzz&num=1044683390&start=0..........
"Re: The 1925 serum run, by Dude Dog
< Reply #1 on: February 8th, 2003, 3:17am >
The Serum Run was not tecnically a race - it was a relay of teams to get medicine to Nome:While the race to Nome began when Dr. Curtis Welch in Nome diagnosed a Diphtheria outbreak. With very little serum in Nome a call for help was sent out. While serum was being rushed north the logistics of how to transport it Nome where settled. It was decided that the fastest way to get the serum to Nome was to dog sled it over 600 miles from Nenana.
Anxiously waiting in Nome, Dr. Welch had administered all of the diphtheria serum that he had. The disease had already caused five deaths. There were another twenty-two confirmed cases and another eighty probable ones. Time was of the essence.
The serum arrived in Nome at 5:40 AM on February 2nd, barely a week after leaving Anchorage and 127 hours after departing Nenana. The conditions were often brutal with blinding snowstorms and temperatures dropping as low as -64F.
Although when the serum arrived in Nome it was frozen solid, once thawed it proved to still be vital. What the dog drivers had been asked to achieve in fifteen days, they accomplished in five days, seven and one-half hours. There were no more deaths and the quarantine was lifted within nineteen days"
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