During the years 1887, 1888, 1889, and 1891, the City of Hobart, in common with the principal cities of Australia, was visited by a most severe and extraordinary epidemic wave of typhoid fever. Although, locally, the general death-rate from all causes, and for all ages, was not materially increased above the years preceding the epidemic, still the mortality of persons in the prime of life, especially males between the ages of 20 and 35 years, was unusually large. The alarm caused by this severe visitation very naturally raised a keen enquiry into the sanitary condition of the city ; and many intelligent persons, believing that the epidemic was mainly or solely due to local causes, and particularly to defective drainage and other...
Medical and vital statistics for Hobart, Tasmania, 1856 by Edward Swarbreck Hall (1805-1881) a medic...
Studies of nineteenth-century cause-specific mortality date from the nineteenth century itself. Of n...
© 2011 Natasha Lee SzuhanFocusing on the natural, settlement and disease ecologies, I present the st...
In the nineteenth century boosters claimed that Tasmania was the Sanatorium of the Australian coloni...
At the meeting of the Intercolonial Medical Congress at Melbourne, in 1889, the subject of typhoid ...
In the nineteenth century Tasmania experienced a number of epidemic diseases like scarlet fever, dip...
Typhoid fever records for Hobart during the nineteenth century are examined and the summer of 1887/8...
In most things Tasmania is at a great disadvantage as compared with the neighbour colonies. The lar...
The prevalence during the last three or four months of a fever, whose type was, I believe, assimila...
The drama of Tasmanian epidemics has inspired a number of historical studies. Roe, with smallpox, wa...
Meteorological records recorded at the Observatory, Hobart Town. Includesleafing flowering and fruit...
At the monthly meeting of the Royal Society of Tasmania last evening, His Excellency the Governor ...
Two corollaries of the rapid growth of Sydney, New South Wales, during the nineteenth century were d...
The universality of influenza has made it a topic of discussion in all corners of the globe. The pan...
Meteorological records recorded at the Observatory, Hobart Town. Includes leafing, flowering, and f...
Medical and vital statistics for Hobart, Tasmania, 1856 by Edward Swarbreck Hall (1805-1881) a medic...
Studies of nineteenth-century cause-specific mortality date from the nineteenth century itself. Of n...
© 2011 Natasha Lee SzuhanFocusing on the natural, settlement and disease ecologies, I present the st...
In the nineteenth century boosters claimed that Tasmania was the Sanatorium of the Australian coloni...
At the meeting of the Intercolonial Medical Congress at Melbourne, in 1889, the subject of typhoid ...
In the nineteenth century Tasmania experienced a number of epidemic diseases like scarlet fever, dip...
Typhoid fever records for Hobart during the nineteenth century are examined and the summer of 1887/8...
In most things Tasmania is at a great disadvantage as compared with the neighbour colonies. The lar...
The prevalence during the last three or four months of a fever, whose type was, I believe, assimila...
The drama of Tasmanian epidemics has inspired a number of historical studies. Roe, with smallpox, wa...
Meteorological records recorded at the Observatory, Hobart Town. Includesleafing flowering and fruit...
At the monthly meeting of the Royal Society of Tasmania last evening, His Excellency the Governor ...
Two corollaries of the rapid growth of Sydney, New South Wales, during the nineteenth century were d...
The universality of influenza has made it a topic of discussion in all corners of the globe. The pan...
Meteorological records recorded at the Observatory, Hobart Town. Includes leafing, flowering, and f...
Medical and vital statistics for Hobart, Tasmania, 1856 by Edward Swarbreck Hall (1805-1881) a medic...
Studies of nineteenth-century cause-specific mortality date from the nineteenth century itself. Of n...
© 2011 Natasha Lee SzuhanFocusing on the natural, settlement and disease ecologies, I present the st...