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Tennessee cholera epidemic (1849–1850)

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A cholera epidemic began in Nashville, Tennessee, in January 1849 and caused many deaths in the city in 1849 and 1850.

The Nashville cholera epidemic was part of a pandemic that occurred between 1842 and 1862. It began in South Asia and was spread globally by travelers. In the United States, the disease outbreak was first recorded in December 1848 at two ports: New York City on December 2 and New Orleans on December 11. It spread into the interior of the country along waterways, appearing in Nashville on January 20, 1849.[1]

The number of cases increased by June 1849. The death that month, in Nashville, of former president James K. Polk may have been due to cholera, possibly acquired during travels in other parts of the South.[2][3] Cholera is reported to have been prevalent in the city around the time of his funeral, in June 1849.[4][5] According to an account published in 1866, there were 311 cholera deaths in Nashville in 1849,[6] a very large death toll for a city with a population of only about 10,000.[3]

The number of cases increased dramatically again in June and July 1850.[4] Estimates of cholera deaths in 1850 range from 316 to about 500.[6] There were 64 deaths from cholera in just the first 4 days of July 1850.[3] The epidemic led the University of Nashville to suspend operations and led its president, Philip Lindsley, to resign.[7] In a letter written on July 16, 1850, Mary Hamilton House reported to her husband that the epidemic was waning, as the death rate had dropped to only "three to six or eight deaths" per day.[8] However, the following month, mineralogist Gerard Troost died in Nashville from cholera.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ Pyle, G. F. (1969). "The Diffusion of Cholera in the United States in the Nineteenth Century". Geographical Analysis. 1 (1): 65–69. doi:10.1111/j.1538-4632.1969.tb00605.x. PMID 11614509.
  2. ^ "James Knox Polk". American President: A Reference Resource. Miller Center, University of Virginia.
  3. ^ a b c "Cumberland Masonic Lodge 8; Existing Tombstones". Nashville City Cemetery Association.
  4. ^ a b Röbert, Charles Edwin (1880). Nashville City Guide Book. Nashville, Tennessee: Wheeler Brothers. p. 17.
  5. ^ Röbert, Charles Edwin (1870). Nashville and Her Trade for 1870: A Work Containing Information Valuable Alike to Merchants, Manufacturers, Mechanics, Emigrants and Capitalists. Roberts & Purvis.
  6. ^ a b Bowling, William King (1866). Cholera, as it appeared in Nashville in 1849, 1850, 1854 and 1866. Nashville, Tennessee.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ Harwell, Sarah. "John Berrien Lindsley". Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture.
  8. ^ "Mary Hamilton Thompson Orr Papers, 1791–1896, and Addition 1779–1955" (PDF). Tennessee State Library and Archives. May 6, 1998.
  9. ^ Wilson, Wendell E. (2014). "Gerard Troost (1776–1850)". Mineralogical Record Biographical Archive.