As disease spread, the national government was slow to react. Soon, citizens donned protective masks and the authorities ordered quarantines. The streets emptied. Doubters questioned the science and disobeyed. The year: 1793. The place: young America from Baltimore to Boston but especially in Philadelphia, the nation’s largest city and seat of the federal government. For 3 long months yellow fever, carried by mosquitoes let loose from a ship from Africa, ravaged the eastern seaboard The federal government abandoned the city and scattered, leaving a dangerous leadership gap. By the end of the pandemic, ten percent of Philadelphians had died.Americas First Plague offers the definitive telling of this long-forgotten crisis, capturing the wave of fear that swept across the fledgling republic, and the numerous unintended but far-reaching consequences it would have on the development of the United States and the Atlantic slave trade. It is an intriguing tale of fear and human nature, a tragic lesson of how prejudice toward blacks was so easily stoked, an examination of the primitive state of medicine and vulnerability to disease in the eighteenth century, and a story of the struggle to govern in the face of crisis. With eerie similarities to the Covid pandemic, historian Robert P. Watson tells the story of a young nation teetering on the brink of chaos.
Robert P. Watson
America’s First Plague [EPUB ebook]
The Deadly 1793 Epidemic that Crippled a Young Nation
America’s First Plague [EPUB ebook]
The Deadly 1793 Epidemic that Crippled a Young Nation
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Taal Engels ● Formaat EPUB ● ISBN 9781538164891 ● Uitgeverij Rowman & Littlefield Publishers ● Gepubliceerd 2023 ● Downloadbare 3 keer ● Valuta EUR ● ID 8846743 ● Kopieerbeveiliging Adobe DRM
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