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  1. William Hamilton, the owner of Bush Hill, received $2,000 for the use of his property during the 1793 epidemic and as rent for the ensuing 1.5 years in the event that Philadelphia should experience a similar need during that period. The estate was used as a yellow fever hospital again in 1797.

  2. The Yellow Fever Epidemic in Philadelphia, 1793. Yellow fever is known for bringing on a characteristic yellow tinge to the eyes and skin, and for the terrible “black vomit” caused by bleeding into the stomach. Known today to be spread by infected mosquitoes, yellow fever was long believed to be a miasmatic disease originating in rotting ...

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  4. May 28, 2020 · Between 1793 and 1805, waves of yellow fever attacked northern ports in the U.S. Then the disease retreated south, where it persisted through the end of the 19th century. At the turn of the 20th century, a time of great advances in bacteriology, scientists discovered that yellow fever was transmitted by the bite of an infected mosquito.

  5. The new republic was only four years old, its capital recently established in Philadelphia, when the country suffered its first catastrophic epidemic. Yellow fever broke out in August 1793 and ravaged the city for three months, only subsiding in November. Twenty thousand people fled the city, as many as 5,000 died (ten percent of Philadelphia ...

  6. Apr 13, 2023 · This was the 1793 yellow fever epidemic in Philadelphia, which overwhelmed the city’s residents, Quakers and non-Quakers alike, from August to November. People died, families fled, businesses closed, but volunteers, including Quaker and Blacks, helped the afflicted in basic ways. Symptoms of the spreading disease included high fevers ...

  7. Aug 28, 2019 · Nearly 20,000 individuals simply moved to the countryside to escape the fever. Unfortunately, three more yellow fever epidemics would hit Philadelphia in the late 1700s, and it wouldn’t be until 1881 that epidemiologist Carlos Finlay correctly hypothesized that the Aedes aegypti mosquito was the carrier of the disease.

  8. who died of yellow fever, Mitchell noted that the abdominal viscera were filled with blood. It appeared that the body was packed with vicious humors, and the only way to stabilize it was to evacuate the offensive matter.17 Rush was deeply inspired and his imagination piqued. Thus began the practice of heroic therapy in the treatment of yellow ...

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