Paul Alexander (polio survivor)
Paul Richard Alexander (January 30, 1946 March 11, 2024) was an American paralytic polio survivor, attorney, and author. After contracting polio in 1952 at the age of six, he spent the remainder and vast majority of his life in an iron lung, and is currently recognized as the person to have spent the longest period of time occupying one at almost 72 years. Decades following his disablement, Alexander earned a bachelor's degree and Juris Doctor at the University of Texas at Austin, and was admitted to the bar in 1986. He self-published a memoir in 2020 and, late in life, built a following on TikTok.
Paul Alexander
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/60/Paul_Alexander_(polio_survivor).jpg/500px-Paul_Alexander_(polio_survivor).jpg
Alexander in 1986
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Fri Aug 16, 2024:
On this day, August 16, 1955, Boston's polio epidemic hit a high of 480 cases.
Obituaries
Paul Alexander, forced into an iron lung by polio in 1952, dies at 78
March 13, 2024 12:18 PM ET
By
Bill Chappell

Paul Alexander, who held a Guinness World Record for living the longest with the help of an iron lung, has died. Here, medical staff stand among iron lung machines in an emergency polio ward at Haynes Memorial Hospital in Boston, Mass., on Aug. 16, 1955, when the city's polio epidemic hit a high of 480 cases.
AP
Polio struck Paul Alexander in 1952, when he was just 6 years old. Within days, the disease robbed him of the use of his body. But he fought through the illness, using an iron lung for more than 70 years and inspiring people with his determination to live a full life. He painted, wrote a book and worked for years as an attorney.
"Paul took a lot of pride in being a positive role model for others," his friend Christopher Ulmer, who organized a GoFundMe page for Alexander in 2022, said in a message to NPR. "More than anything I believe he would want others to know they are capable of great things."
Alexander died on Monday at age 78,
according to a notice by the Grove Hill Funeral Home & Memorial Park in his hometown of Dallas, Texas.
Ulmer says he first met Alexander when he filmed an interview with him; the two stayed in touch afterward. Ulmer launched a donation campaign for Alexander after people betrayed his trust and left him in need of better living accommodations, he said. In response, people donated more than $140,000.
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From
appalachiablue:
Thu Mar 14, 2024:
Paul Alexander - In Iron Lung for Polio Since 1952, More Than 70 Yrs - Dies At 78: NPR