
Sarah Morlok Cotton, Quadruplet Who Knew Fame and Suffering, Dies at 95
Her death, at an adult foster home, was confirmed by her son David Cotton.
The Morlok Quads, as they came to be known, were a medical marvel and attracted crowds of people to Edward W. Sparrow Hospital in Lansing, Mich., shortly after they were born there on May 19, 1930.
Newspapers held naming contests, and the winning entry suggested names that derived from the first letters of the hospital: Edna, Wilma, Sarah and Helen. The quadruplets' middle names were simply initials denoting their birth order. (Sarah, the third born, was C.)
Donations poured in almost immediately. The city of Lansing provided the family with a rent-free home. The Massachusetts Carriage Company sent a custom-made baby carriage with four seats. Businessmen opened bank accounts for each child.
'Lansing's Morlok quadruplets,' The Associated Press wrote, 'are the most famous group of babies on the American continent.'
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