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Charles Mix County allows quarantine and disinfecting costs as diphtheria and smallpox responses continue

Board of County Commissioners, Charles Mix County · May 3, 2026
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Summary

Across multiple sessions the board approved Board of Health bills for quarantine, disinfecting and veterinary testing tied to diphtheria, smallpox and glander cases, allowed payments to physicians and disinfecting teams, and rejected some charges; the minutes list names and amounts but record no detailed debate.

The Charles Mix County Board of Commissioners approved a series of Board of Health claims and public-health expenditures across 1907 in response to diphtheria, smallpox and glander cases. The minutes list physician and veterinary attendance, quarantining and disinfecting work, medicines and related costs that the board allowed for payment.

Why it matters: County boards fund and authorize urgent public-health work—quarantines, disinfecting and veterinary testing are authorities counties exercise to control contagious disease and animal-health threats that affect public safety and commerce.

The minutes repeatedly record motions allowing payments to public-health actors. Notable entries list P.R. Pinard for Board of Health service and quarantine work, Dr. R.P. Frink for disinfecting and coroner duties, Dr. Seapy for attending diphtheria patients and disinfecting, and veterinary fees for glander testing. Some bills were allowed in full, some were paid at reduced amounts, and a few claims were rejected (the minutes note at least one disinfecting/stable-cleaning bill rejected by the Board of Health). The record does not include verbatim testimony or roll-call votes—payments are recorded as allowed or rejected by motion.

The board also recorded reimbursements and refunds tied to quarantine or care costs (for example, ambulance/transportation and lodging billed in connection with treatment and quarantine). When the minutes record medical attendance or veterinary services they include dollar amounts; the board’s auditor was instructed to draw warrants for approved payments.

What’s next: The minutes show continued use of county funds for immediate public-health responses. The record does not describe a public-health ordinance change or a long-term funding plan; future meetings list follow-up health bills and occasional rejections when the board or health officers judged claims ineligible.

Attribution: where the minutes name practitioners the article identifies them by the roles recorded (e.g., Dr. R.P. Frink — coroner/physician; P.R. Pinard — Board of Health member).