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- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!usc!randvax!lincoln
- From: lincoln@rand.org (Tom Lincoln)
- Newsgroups: soc.roots
- Subject: Re: Pest house
- Message-ID: <4240@randvax.rand.org>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 16:02:55 GMT
- References: <2B5D1BDD@router.em.cdc.gov>
- Sender: news@randvax.rand.org
- Organization: RAND
- Lines: 35
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-
- In article <2B5D1BDD@router.em.cdc.gov> SLR2@CCDDCD1.EM.CDC.GOV writes:
- >This might help you regarding the epidemic disease or diseases of Haverhill,
- >Mass., in the late 1600's.
- >
-
- > Some strong possibilities for the epidemic diseases that may have been
- >present in Haverhill, Mass, in the late 1600's are yellow fever, small
- >pox, cholera, typhoid, louse-borne typhus....
-
- Typhus is an unlikely candidate. It is most characteristically a disease of
- filth, rats and wartime combined and was common in WW I and II among
- devistated groups. It was also common in the gettos and the Germans
- feared it.
-
- Curiously, there was none in the Civil War and the disease has never gained
- a permanent foothold in the US. IT was not uncommon on later immigration
- ships, but the early ones were too small and intimate to be filthy in
- the sense of the later cattle boats.
-
- >FYI, yellow fever caused the abandonment of
- >Philadelphia as the US national capital.
-
- It is also said to have contributed to the two party system:
-
- The Federalists thought the French brought it (there were numerous
- French refugees from Haiti -- which had just had a revolution), while
- the Republican-Democrats thought it arose from the swamps.
-
- In any case, there was much finger pointing -- between the members of
- the government who fled the city and those who stayed..
-
- Also there were contraversies about therapy. Bleeding vs. wine (those
- who backed the French were for wine)....
-
- Tom
-