{"officer":{"id":"27625","cause_id":"41","agency_id":"3658","rank_id":"141","first_name":"Harry","nickname":null,"middle_name":"Oliver","last_name":"Webster","suffix":null,"badge":"Not available","gender":"M","age":"32","is_approved":"1","is_veteran":null,"is_odmp_discovered":"1","race":"C","tour_of_duty_days":"4 years, 6 months","date_eow":"Monday, September 30, 1918","date_doi":"Thursday, September 26, 1918","incident_state":"MA","weapon_id":null,"incident_description":"Patrolman Harry Webster died as a result of complications from influenza while performing his assigned duties during the Influenza Pandemic.
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\nThe city of Springfield, due to the overwhelming number of influenza cases and a shortage of doctors, worked in coordination with the Massachusetts Army National Guard and the MassMutual Insurance Company to create a temporary field hospital outside Springfield in Forrest Park, known as \"Tent City,\" to treat victims of the influenza.
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\nThe Springfield Police Department had been tasked with enforcing local health laws to help prevent the spread of influenza, as well as performing their regular police duties.
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\nPatrolman Webster served with the Springfield Police Department for more than four years. He was survived by his wife, daughter, and parents.
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\nHe is buried at Oak Grove Cemetery in Springfield.","extra_incident_id":"30","extra_incident_name":"1918 Influenza","suspect_information":"Not available","related":null,"nleomf_panel":null,"nleomf_line":null,"nleomf_dir":null,"odmp_notes":"Rocky Geppert","dt_created":"2025-12-30 20:17:55","dt_updated":"2026-02-28 01:38:20","updater":null,"incident_loc_lat":null,"incident_loc_lon":null,"is_lodd_sent":"0","dt_approved":"2025-12-31 09:22:00","is_felonious":"0","full_name":"Harry Oliver Webster","rank":"Patrolman","cause":"Influenza Pandemic","weapon":"Not available","extra_incident":"
Also known as \"Spanish Flu\" or \"LaGrippe,\" the Influenza Pandemic of 1918 to early 1920, infected an estimated 500 million people worldwide\u2014about one-third of the planet\u2019s population\u2014and killed approximately 675,000 Americans. The effect of the influenza epidemic in the United States was so dire that the average life span in the U.S. fell by twelve years. The four waves of the flu began in March 1918 and ended in April 1920. Many officers contracted this virus due to the requirements of their job.<\/p>
The names of every officer who died in the line of duty from the Influenza Pandemic will likely never be known. Still, ODMP researchers continue to uncover new cases as part of our mission never to forget the fallen.<\/p>