The first case discovered in Hong Hong was by Scottish doctor
James Alfred Lowson, acting superintendent of the Government Civil Hospital, on 8 May 1894. The patient, named "A. Hung", was a ward boy, presumably working in the Government Civil Hospital. "A. Hung" died 5 days later. On 10 May 1894, the city was declared an infected port. The Japanese government sent
Kitasato Shibasaburō, a bacteriologist, to investigate the plague. On 5 June, Kitasato departed Yokohama on
SS City of Rio de Janeiro with a team of 5, arriving in Hong Kong on 12 June. On 14 June, Kitasato discovered that the bacillus, now known as
Yersinia pestis, was the direct cause of the plague. However, he was doubtful of its significance as the autopsy was done 11 hours after death. His finding was reported by Lowson, who had supported Kitasato's work, to The Lancet. His report was published a week later, on 25 August. Just three days after Kitasato's arrival, Yersin arrived alone in Hong Kong on 15 June. Yersin had travelled alone from French Indochina, carrying in his baggage a microscope, sterilizer, and culture supplies. He was sent there to investigate the outbreak by the government of France. Unlike Kitasato, Lowson did not offer Yersin support, as Lowson considered France to be a colonial competitor to Great Britain in East Asia. At the hospital, Yersin would find all the cadavers reserved for Kitasato. Yersin was able to obtain specimens after bribing English sailors responsible for disposing of the bodies of plague victims. Yersin discovered the bacillus on 23 June. The two rivals were introduced, but they exchanged little information in their common language of German. The story was related that, at a meeting of the two during an autopsy that Kitasato was conducting, Yersin was surprised to observe that Kitasato was examining blood rather than buboes. Yersin relayed the suggestion via an intermediary that buboes should be examined too, with the result that Kitasato subsequently examined buboes. Both men found bacteria that they designated as the cause of the disease. Yersin correctly described his as Gram-negative, whereas Kitasato insisted that his organism was Gram-positive. Kitasato described his blood organism as diplococcal and his bubo organism as bacillary, causing confusion and suggesting to some that his cultures were contaminated by the pneumococcus. In the ensuing months and years, Kitasato asserted that his bacillus was different from that of Yersin. During his first autopsy in Hong Kong, he related his method of obtaining fluid from the bubo, seeing Gram-negative bacilli, injecting animals that he observed to die with bacteria in their tissues, and sealing a bubo specimen in a glass tube that was immediately mailed to Paris. These specimens were received by
Albert Calmette and
Amedee Borrel who confirmed Yersin’s findings and carried out research with the bacteria to produce a therapeutic antiserum. Yersin was also able to demonstrate for the first time that the same bacillus was present in the
rodent as well as in the human disease, thus underlining the possible means of transmission. This important discovery was communicated to the
French Academy of Sciences in the same year, by his colleague
Emile Duclaux, in a classic paper titled "La peste bubonique à Hong-Kong". In 1895, Yersin returned to Paris to collaborate with his associates in Pasteur’s laboratories. Before the end of that year, he was back in Indochina, and in 1896 he went to Hong Kong again to treat plague victims with his new antiserum. The name of the organism underwent several changes. It was Bacterium pestis until 1900, when it changed to Bacillus pestis. In 1923, it acquired a new designation as Pasteurella pestis, which it kept up to about 1970, when Yersin obtained posthumous honour through its final name, Yersinia pestis. A 1976 thorough analysis of the
morphology of the organism discovered by Kitasato determined that "we are confident that Kitasato had examined the plague bacillus in Hong Kong in late June and early July 1894", only days after Yersin announced his own discovery on 20 June, and that Kitasato "should not be denied this credit". ==Death and legacy in Vietnam==