1 00:00:01,920 --> 00:00:06,480 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of iHeart Radio, Hey 2 00:00:06,519 --> 00:00:10,960 Speaker 1: brain Stuff Lauren Bogle bam here. In the nineteen forties, 3 00:00:11,039 --> 00:00:15,160 Speaker 1: America was under a constant threat from polio, a disease 4 00:00:15,200 --> 00:00:19,280 Speaker 1: that had a then unknown cause and devastating effects, especially 5 00:00:19,320 --> 00:00:24,120 Speaker 1: in children. It spread quickly through unclean water and unwashed hands, 6 00:00:24,239 --> 00:00:28,320 Speaker 1: leading to symptoms like nausea, fatigue, fever, and the stiffening 7 00:00:28,400 --> 00:00:33,840 Speaker 1: of the body. Summers, especially sausages, and infections, particularly around 8 00:00:33,880 --> 00:00:38,199 Speaker 1: swimming holes, leading to post polio paralysis and in some 9 00:00:38,280 --> 00:00:43,360 Speaker 1: cases death. On average, thirty five thousand people were disabled 10 00:00:43,400 --> 00:00:46,559 Speaker 1: each year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 11 00:00:47,400 --> 00:00:50,920 Speaker 1: President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was among the most notable people 12 00:00:50,960 --> 00:00:53,640 Speaker 1: to get the condition, putting a face to a still 13 00:00:53,760 --> 00:00:59,080 Speaker 1: uncertain disease. A vaccine was desperately needed as scientists learned 14 00:00:59,080 --> 00:01:02,600 Speaker 1: about the transmission process, including the fact that anyone could 15 00:01:02,600 --> 00:01:06,640 Speaker 1: be a carrier. In the next few years, rival scientists 16 00:01:06,720 --> 00:01:09,640 Speaker 1: Jonas Salk and Albert Saban worked with teams in their 17 00:01:09,720 --> 00:01:13,720 Speaker 1: labs on two completely different vaccines. Saban worked on an 18 00:01:13,840 --> 00:01:17,720 Speaker 1: oral vaccine, while Sulk created an injectable vaccine using a 19 00:01:17,920 --> 00:01:23,280 Speaker 1: killed version of Polio. In the book Polio, An American Story, 20 00:01:23,600 --> 00:01:27,280 Speaker 1: David m Oshinsky writes about the urgency of Salk's work 21 00:01:27,400 --> 00:01:31,920 Speaker 1: during the time, quote for Sealk, there was reason to hurry. 22 00:01:32,080 --> 00:01:35,080 Speaker 1: The year nineteen fifty two was the worst polio year 23 00:01:35,160 --> 00:01:38,600 Speaker 1: on record, with more than fifty seven thousand cases nationwide. 24 00:01:39,120 --> 00:01:43,440 Speaker 1: The headlines screamed of plague season and polio time. Twenty 25 00:01:43,440 --> 00:01:48,040 Speaker 1: one thousand victims suffered permanent paralysis, and about three thousand died. 26 00:01:49,680 --> 00:01:53,160 Speaker 1: From the very beginning of the polio epidemic, monkeys were 27 00:01:53,160 --> 00:01:56,600 Speaker 1: considered to be essential for research before human trials could 28 00:01:56,600 --> 00:02:00,280 Speaker 1: take place, becoming the unsung heroes of the fight to 29 00:02:00,360 --> 00:02:04,080 Speaker 1: defeat the disease. It was through animal research that scientists 30 00:02:04,120 --> 00:02:07,240 Speaker 1: first discovered that there were three strains of the deadly disease. 31 00:02:08,680 --> 00:02:11,640 Speaker 1: The monkeys were purchased at a high cost from India 32 00:02:11,680 --> 00:02:15,040 Speaker 1: and the Philippines and shipped to the United States. Many 33 00:02:15,120 --> 00:02:18,840 Speaker 1: died in transit, so the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, 34 00:02:19,080 --> 00:02:22,400 Speaker 1: now known as the March of Dimes, began overseeing their 35 00:02:22,440 --> 00:02:26,840 Speaker 1: import In nineteen forty nine, a foundation established a special 36 00:02:26,919 --> 00:02:30,840 Speaker 1: facility known as ok Tee Farms in rural South Carolina 37 00:02:31,080 --> 00:02:35,640 Speaker 1: to process the monkeys arriving from abroad. Ok Tee Farms 38 00:02:35,680 --> 00:02:39,080 Speaker 1: operated in the Pyney Colony area of Beaufort County in 39 00:02:39,120 --> 00:02:44,120 Speaker 1: coastal South Carolina. Originally called the Pritchardville Primate Center, the 40 00:02:44,160 --> 00:02:47,000 Speaker 1: forty acre or sixteen hectar a tract of land along 41 00:02:47,000 --> 00:02:50,680 Speaker 1: the river, was called by local newspapers the Ellis Island 42 00:02:50,800 --> 00:02:56,160 Speaker 1: for thousands of monkeys from India. Naturalist John Hamlet had 43 00:02:56,160 --> 00:02:58,560 Speaker 1: the job of finding a space for the primate center 44 00:02:58,639 --> 00:03:01,880 Speaker 1: that was both connected to deep water ports and airports, 45 00:03:01,880 --> 00:03:05,760 Speaker 1: but also remote enough from neighbors. The area he shows 46 00:03:05,919 --> 00:03:09,320 Speaker 1: closely approximated the natural habitats of the monkeys, with its 47 00:03:09,360 --> 00:03:12,680 Speaker 1: abundance of shady long leaf pines and a mild climate. 48 00:03:14,120 --> 00:03:17,240 Speaker 1: The monkeys were originally brought into Savannah, Georgia, one of 49 00:03:17,240 --> 00:03:20,560 Speaker 1: the region's biggest ports, and taken by truck the thirty 50 00:03:20,560 --> 00:03:24,359 Speaker 1: odd miles or fifty some kilometers to the farm. When 51 00:03:24,400 --> 00:03:27,560 Speaker 1: air travel became more popular, they were flown via London 52 00:03:27,600 --> 00:03:31,120 Speaker 1: in New York before traveling by train to the low Country, 53 00:03:31,560 --> 00:03:34,200 Speaker 1: But once they arrived at the farm, veterinarians treated the 54 00:03:34,280 --> 00:03:38,240 Speaker 1: two thousand or so rhesus and synomologous monkeys before clearing 55 00:03:38,280 --> 00:03:42,040 Speaker 1: them for transport to research facilities around the country. The 56 00:03:42,080 --> 00:03:45,120 Speaker 1: monkeys spent twenty one days getting acclimated and eating a 57 00:03:45,160 --> 00:03:49,600 Speaker 1: special diet was scientists carefully monitoring their status. Many went 58 00:03:49,680 --> 00:03:53,080 Speaker 1: to Selks facility in Pittsburgh and Sabin's in an arbor, 59 00:03:53,160 --> 00:03:56,320 Speaker 1: where they were given vaccines to test the vaccine's strength 60 00:03:56,400 --> 00:04:01,160 Speaker 1: against the three strains of poliovirus. A few locals were 61 00:04:01,160 --> 00:04:03,480 Speaker 1: aware of the research that was going on at the farm. 62 00:04:03,760 --> 00:04:07,760 Speaker 1: Despite rumors of people encountering the animals, we were unable 63 00:04:07,760 --> 00:04:11,600 Speaker 1: to discover any opposition to the research facility, perhaps because 64 00:04:11,600 --> 00:04:14,280 Speaker 1: it was not well known, and also because opposition to 65 00:04:14,360 --> 00:04:16,800 Speaker 1: using animals and testing was not very common at the 66 00:04:16,800 --> 00:04:20,440 Speaker 1: time in the United States. The movement against animal testing 67 00:04:20,480 --> 00:04:25,159 Speaker 1: didn't pick up steam until around nineteen eighty. In any case, 68 00:04:25,560 --> 00:04:29,680 Speaker 1: the farm's purpose wasn't permanent. One Sal's polio vaccine was 69 00:04:29,720 --> 00:04:32,760 Speaker 1: deemed success and released to the public in nineteen fifty five. 70 00:04:33,200 --> 00:04:36,000 Speaker 1: The work of Okte Farms was no longer necessary, and 71 00:04:36,040 --> 00:04:39,760 Speaker 1: the facility closed in nineteen fifty nine. H Saban's oral 72 00:04:39,880 --> 00:04:43,960 Speaker 1: vaccine came into use in nineteen sixty one. The foundation 73 00:04:44,000 --> 00:04:46,919 Speaker 1: that had established the facility turned its attention to reducing 74 00:04:46,960 --> 00:04:50,640 Speaker 1: premature births. The monkeys found new homes and labs across 75 00:04:50,640 --> 00:04:55,279 Speaker 1: the country. According to a former employee named Louise Crawford, 76 00:04:55,600 --> 00:04:57,760 Speaker 1: things that the farm were left just as they were, 77 00:04:58,080 --> 00:05:01,679 Speaker 1: including the monkey cages. Caretaker kept the grass in plant 78 00:05:01,720 --> 00:05:04,560 Speaker 1: life at bay. The lab was locked up ready for 79 00:05:04,600 --> 00:05:07,320 Speaker 1: someone new to take on the important task of preparing 80 00:05:07,360 --> 00:05:12,640 Speaker 1: monkeys for research, but that day never came. In nineteen eighty, 81 00:05:12,760 --> 00:05:15,640 Speaker 1: the land and its contents were sold to a development group. 82 00:05:15,960 --> 00:05:18,839 Speaker 1: The lab equipment was donated to a local school science department, 83 00:05:18,960 --> 00:05:21,640 Speaker 1: while a farmer claimed the former monkey cages for his 84 00:05:21,680 --> 00:05:25,159 Speaker 1: own animals. Today, the acreage along the oak Ti River 85 00:05:25,400 --> 00:05:29,400 Speaker 1: is mostly residential and privately owned. Thanks to Selks and 86 00:05:29,400 --> 00:05:33,840 Speaker 1: Saban's vaccines, polio cases of plummeted from three fifty thousand 87 00:05:34,960 --> 00:05:40,960 Speaker 1: to just twenty two. Animal testing is still considered objectionable 88 00:05:41,040 --> 00:05:44,520 Speaker 1: in many settings, such as the cosmetics industry, but it 89 00:05:44,720 --> 00:05:47,839 Speaker 1: is an important final step in some medical testing before 90 00:05:47,839 --> 00:05:51,880 Speaker 1: treatment is attempted with human patients. Hopefully, in the future, 91 00:05:52,200 --> 00:05:56,159 Speaker 1: medical technologies like lab grown organs and advanced computing will 92 00:05:56,160 --> 00:05:59,960 Speaker 1: allow scientists to avoid the practice altogether, but for now, 93 00:06:00,240 --> 00:06:08,760 Speaker 1: it saves countless lives. Today's episode was written by Caroline 94 00:06:08,800 --> 00:06:11,320 Speaker 1: Eubanks and produced by Tyler Clang. For more in this 95 00:06:11,400 --> 00:06:13,960 Speaker 1: a lots of other topics, visit hous stufforks dot com. 96 00:06:14,040 --> 00:06:16,320 Speaker 1: Brain Stuff is production of I heart Radio or more 97 00:06:16,360 --> 00:06:18,840 Speaker 1: podcasts to my heart radio visit the iHeart Radio app, 98 00:06:18,920 --> 00:06:21,640 Speaker 1: Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows