202 [CHAP. VIII. The wards were distributed originally as follows : - 1. Town wards ... {1. Mr. Weir, I.O.S. {2. Mr. Pratt, I.C.S. {3. Mr. Kennedy. {4. Lieutenant Bruce, I.S.C. 2. Wards outside the Town ... {5. Mr. Thatcher, District Superintendent of Police {6. Lieutenant Wake. Mr. Thatcher was put in charge of the small railway village Tiregaon and of the bungalow and servants' quarters near the station. Lieutenant Wake took over the Motibág Camp and the now empty Sadar Bazár and Modikhána. On the arrival of Lieutenants Kidd, Henderson and Cumming the number of wards was increased to 9, 7 being in the town. Towards the end of November, 30 men of the Durham Light Infantry also arrived for plague duty. They assisted the Ward Superintendents in searching, and Lieutenant Wake in the systematic disinfection of the town. From the end of November, too, the operations in the town consisted chiefly of the ward system and compulsory evacuation of badly-infected quarters. On the 12th December, Captain F. H. Dominichetti, 28th Madras Infantry, arrived and took over charge of Mr. Pratt's ward, the latter taking over the superintendence of the Health Camp. During the week ending. 26th November 1897 Mr. A. Wingate, the Plague Commissioner, visited Sholápur and inspected the arrangements. The epidemic reached its climax during the fortnight ending 10th December 1897, during which time 813 deaths were registered from plague; the maximum for one day being 98 deaths. The Collector's remarks on this period are striking :- "These figures, terrible as they are in themselves, fail to convey an adequate idea of the appalling severity of the epidemic, unless it is remembered that the population had been reduced by flight by at least one-half of its normal numbers. After the 10th of Decem- ber, the plague rapidly declined, chiefly owing to the fact that the evacuation of the city was more and more vigorously pushed on throughout December, until by the end of the month the city had been completely emptied and the whole population were camped out either in their own fields and gardens in the environs or the city or were lodged in the large organised health camps into which the poorer classes were drafted from their homes in the city. The largest of these health camps was on the open plain near the Fort and contained nearly 10,000 people. Being built almost entirely of gunny bags stretched over bamboos, it was named by Mr. Morison 'Pothepur' or 'Gunny Bag Town."' Evacuation may then be taken as begun on 3rd December 1897 and complete from 31st December 1897. The following figures bear eloquent testimony to its efficacy:- Week ending INDIGENOUS PLAGUE. REMARKS. Cases. Deaths. 5th November 1897 146 117 12th " " 143 118 No evacuation. 19th " " 221 182 26th " " 363 297 3rd December " 502 377 Evacuation of infected quarters only. 10th " " 501 436 17th " " 300 246 Evacuation of the whole town began and proceed- ing rapidly. 24th " " 134 49 31st " " 53 36 7th January 1898 26 27 Evacuation complete, 14th " " 9 9 21st " " 7 11 28th " " 5 8