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The History of 19th-Century Quarantine Politics: A Conversation with David S. Barnes

Peoples & Things

CHAPTER

The Wave of Yellow Fever That Hit Philadelphia in the 1790s

In the 1790s Philadelphia was the nation's capital and busiest seaport. Yellow fever killed 5000 people out of a population of 50,000 in the space of two months. Thomas Jefferson himself wrote to several friends that the consequence of yellow fever would be to depopulate all cities. And it made some people wonder whether any large city in this landscape in this part of the world was sustainable.

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