During the fall of 1918, San Francisco acted quickly when the Spanish influenza hit, implementing a shutdown and enforcing mask-wearing in public.
If that sounds familiar, it's because San Francisco is one of many Bay Area counties that also took proactive steps in combating the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. But if San Francisco's track record of responding to pandemics is any indication, lifting the gates on the lockdown too soon could have disastrous consequences.
Spanish-flu infections seemed to dwindle by November 1918, and the city relaxed lockdown orders. When another wave hit San Francisco, much of the public - including "The Anti-Mask League" - resisted the mandates that city leaders reenacted to help blunt the spread of the disease. The city ended up with nearly 45,000 cases and over 3,000 reported deaths.
It's a cautionary tale as officials across the US fight to flatten the curve against the coronavirus disease by implementing stay-at-home orders and city shutdowns, even as some Americans protest those measures.
Here's how San Francisco went from serving as a national role model to having one of the country's highest death rates during the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918-19.