Cape Cod History
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1905: The first lepers arrive on Penikese Island in Buzzards Bay
Leper Colony begun on an island 12 miles off Cape Cod

Approaching Penikese in a catboat sailing in Buzzards Bay.
On this day in 1905, five lepers arrived on Penikese Island in Buzzard's Bay, the site of the first and only leprosarium in Massachusetts. Over the next 16 years, 36 victims of leprosy, or Hansen's disease, lived on the isolated island, along with a handful of caregivers. Dr. Frank Parker and his wife, Marion, went to great lengths to make the patients comfortable, providing good food, fresh air, exercise, entertainment, and nursing, but it was nearly impossible to overcome the stigma and social ostracism associated with leprosy. Still, the island produced stories of great courage, kindess, and fortitude. The colony closed when the federal government opened a leprosy hospital in Louisiana. Today, the island is home to a private school for troubled youth.
The Background
Leprosy, a contagious and incurable disease that causes lesions, deformities, and if untreated by modern drugs death, has been known and feared since ancient times. For generations, lepers suffered not only from physical debilitation, but from the misconception that the disease was caused by uncleanliness. Until the discovery of antibiotics, which effectively control the disease, it was public policy to remove lepers from their homes and communities and send them live out their lives in quarantined settings like the one on Pekinese Island, located 12 miles off Cape Cod.
Leprosy was practically unheard of in Massachusetts until the last quarter of the nineteenth century, when increased immigration brought people from countries where the disease was more prevalent. Even then, the number of reported cases was low. Since 95% of the population is naturally immune to the disease, it spread slowly. Still, residents were terrified by the thought that there was even one leper in their midst. Officials deported any newcomers found to have the disease and confined other victims to poorhouse attics or quarantine centers in Boston. By 1904, when the number of reported cases reached double-digits, the state decided it had to create an isolated facility to care for lepers.
One of the better-known residents of Penikese was 16-year-old Archie Thomas, who arrived in 1912. Newspapers widely reported the story of his widowed but healthy mother who chose to go into isolation with her only child.
One of the better-known residents of Penikese was 16-year-old Archie Thomas, who arrived in 1912. Newspapers widely reported the story of his widowed but healthy mother who chose to go into isolation with her only child. A bright boy with an interest in physics and electricity, he received a two-way radio from the New Bedford Women's Society. By sharing news from the Marconi News Service and communicating with operators on other islands and on passing ships, Archie gave the Penikese lepers their only contact with "ordinary people." When Archie died in 1915, the news was slow to reach the mainland — no one else knew how to use his radio.
Over the years, the average number of lepers living on the island was 14; the inmate population peaked at 17 in the mid 1910s. By 1921, when the U.S. government established a national leprosarium in Louisiana, there were two women and 11 men remaining in the Massachusetts colony. They traveled by tugboat to New Bedford (where the local paper reported that "the morbidly curious . . . gathered around the hospital car while the lepers were making their way to it"), then by hospital train to Louisiana. The Parkers remained behind to disinfect the island and look for another situation. Hospitals were fearful of their long exposure to leprosy and would not employ them. They had no better luck rebuilding a private practice. After six months, they were forced to leave Massachusetts to live with their son in Montana.
Today
The
state put Penikese up for sale. But concern about contagion was so
strong that no buyers were found. Finally in 1924, officials decided to
raze the buildings and make the island into a bird sanctuary. More than
50 years later, the island became another sort of sanctuary — for
troubled teenagers. An interview with lepers at Penikese in 1905. Source.
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I don't want to give out too many details (as I hope to sell it to ABC as an Afterschool Special), but we all end up owing our lives to a guy named Lenny.
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Horror, because I made the leprosy a mutated virulent strain that was highly contagious and very deadly. The colonists (circa 1700) herded the lepers into a church and burned them to ashes. But one woman escaped, and she....oh, well, you'd have to read the rest, wouldn't you?
Maybe I'll change the locale. But having her swim 12 miles to land is implausible. Bass River it is!