In the nineteenth century boosters claimed that Tasmania was the Sanatorium of the Australian colonies, an island where the sick could gain new vitality and where a long and healthy life was assured. This image was projected in order to attract tourists and immigrants. However the insanitary conditions of the two major cities, Hobart and Launceston, resulted in a series of epidemics of infectious diseases in the 1880s and cast doubt upon the salubrity of the island. This thesis examines the cause of these epidemics and other public health problems faced by the two cities and assesses the way in which public health responsibilities were discharged by the City Councils of Hobart and Launceston, concentrating on the period 1885 to 1914. Detail...
As in the neighbouring colony of Victoria, homeopathy in colonial New South Wales attracted the supp...
Public protest over the siting of infectious disease hospitals was perhaps nowhere more forcefully a...
The present study examines the problems which the London medical officers of health encountered in p...
In the nineteenth century boosters claimed that Tasmania was the Sanatorium of the Australian coloni...
During the years 1887, 1888, 1889, and 1891, the City of Hobart, in common with the principal citie...
In the nineteenth century Tasmania experienced a number of epidemic diseases like scarlet fever, dip...
In the autumn of 1880, an editorial in Launceston's Cornwall Chronicle noted that the 'fair but dirt...
The prevalence during the last three or four months of a fever, whose type was, I believe, assimila...
Typhoid fever records for Hobart during the nineteenth century are examined and the summer of 1887/8...
This dissertation explores the roles of interest groups in the provision of medical facilities and t...
At the monthly meeting of the Royal Society of Tasmania last evening, His Excellency the Governor ...
At the meeting of the Intercolonial Medical Congress at Melbourne, in 1889, the subject of typhoid ...
The popularisation of smallpox vaccination from 1798 appeared to offer the opportunity to check the ...
Contributions to the extensive array of research on nineteenth-century medical history must surmount...
This dissertation examines the first piece of comprehensive public health legislation in New Zealand...
As in the neighbouring colony of Victoria, homeopathy in colonial New South Wales attracted the supp...
Public protest over the siting of infectious disease hospitals was perhaps nowhere more forcefully a...
The present study examines the problems which the London medical officers of health encountered in p...
In the nineteenth century boosters claimed that Tasmania was the Sanatorium of the Australian coloni...
During the years 1887, 1888, 1889, and 1891, the City of Hobart, in common with the principal citie...
In the nineteenth century Tasmania experienced a number of epidemic diseases like scarlet fever, dip...
In the autumn of 1880, an editorial in Launceston's Cornwall Chronicle noted that the 'fair but dirt...
The prevalence during the last three or four months of a fever, whose type was, I believe, assimila...
Typhoid fever records for Hobart during the nineteenth century are examined and the summer of 1887/8...
This dissertation explores the roles of interest groups in the provision of medical facilities and t...
At the monthly meeting of the Royal Society of Tasmania last evening, His Excellency the Governor ...
At the meeting of the Intercolonial Medical Congress at Melbourne, in 1889, the subject of typhoid ...
The popularisation of smallpox vaccination from 1798 appeared to offer the opportunity to check the ...
Contributions to the extensive array of research on nineteenth-century medical history must surmount...
This dissertation examines the first piece of comprehensive public health legislation in New Zealand...
As in the neighbouring colony of Victoria, homeopathy in colonial New South Wales attracted the supp...
Public protest over the siting of infectious disease hospitals was perhaps nowhere more forcefully a...
The present study examines the problems which the London medical officers of health encountered in p...