This article explores the relationship between emigration and outbreaks of cholera in Halifax between 1832 and 1866. Pressures associated with migration from the British Isles, as well as the threat and reality of transmittable diseases like cholera, reveal the vulnerability and strains felt as a colonial port town located off the North Atlantic. This article presents the struggles and tensions apparent with managing emigrants, many of which were bound for territory beyond Nova Scotia, and contributes not only to the historical understanding of how cholera was dealt with in Halifax but also provides a unique perspective on understanding the greater struggles of 19th-century colonial life.Cet article explore le lien entre l’émigration et les...
The influenza pandemic of 1889 was the first truly global flu outbreak in scope. Characterised by hi...
In 1847, 215,000 Irish fled their famine-stricken and diseased homeland, and of this number, some 90...
Cholera is one of the foremost water-borne diseases of citizens in developing countries without adeq...
This article explores the relationship between emigration and outbreaks of cholera in Halifax betwee...
During the summer of 1847, hundreds of thousands of Irish migrants fleeing famine and social upheava...
From the mid-nineteenth century seamen were increasingly identified as vectors of epidemic diseases ...
Between 1837 and 1841, the New South Wales colonial government quarantined fifteen British and Irish...
The cholera scare of 1866 had significant implications for Canadian state-making, public health, and...
An article addressing the significant amount of shipwrecks that have occurred holding emigrants of B...
This article situates the 1850–1851 cholera epidemic in the British colony of Jamaica within prevale...
1 online resource (vii, 200 pages) : colour illustrations, maps (some colour)Includes abstract and a...
In the fall of 1892, fear of cholera was pervasive in North America. Ten years into the fifth intern...
Elizabeth Hall explains the American cholera epidemic of 1849, with special attention to how cholera...
Abstract : This article examines the French Atlantic world through the diverse experiences of Acadia...
[Excerpt] In the 19th century in result of the inherent advances of the industrializing process, the...
The influenza pandemic of 1889 was the first truly global flu outbreak in scope. Characterised by hi...
In 1847, 215,000 Irish fled their famine-stricken and diseased homeland, and of this number, some 90...
Cholera is one of the foremost water-borne diseases of citizens in developing countries without adeq...
This article explores the relationship between emigration and outbreaks of cholera in Halifax betwee...
During the summer of 1847, hundreds of thousands of Irish migrants fleeing famine and social upheava...
From the mid-nineteenth century seamen were increasingly identified as vectors of epidemic diseases ...
Between 1837 and 1841, the New South Wales colonial government quarantined fifteen British and Irish...
The cholera scare of 1866 had significant implications for Canadian state-making, public health, and...
An article addressing the significant amount of shipwrecks that have occurred holding emigrants of B...
This article situates the 1850–1851 cholera epidemic in the British colony of Jamaica within prevale...
1 online resource (vii, 200 pages) : colour illustrations, maps (some colour)Includes abstract and a...
In the fall of 1892, fear of cholera was pervasive in North America. Ten years into the fifth intern...
Elizabeth Hall explains the American cholera epidemic of 1849, with special attention to how cholera...
Abstract : This article examines the French Atlantic world through the diverse experiences of Acadia...
[Excerpt] In the 19th century in result of the inherent advances of the industrializing process, the...
The influenza pandemic of 1889 was the first truly global flu outbreak in scope. Characterised by hi...
In 1847, 215,000 Irish fled their famine-stricken and diseased homeland, and of this number, some 90...
Cholera is one of the foremost water-borne diseases of citizens in developing countries without adeq...