Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Learn how cholera, malaria, and other diseases killed thousands of pioneers and Indians on the 19th-century trails to California and Oregon. The web page does not mention mountain fever or its symptoms.

  2. with mountain fever "' On the following day, they "overtook a train of 10 wagons in which 14 men were tormented by mountain fever."8 Mary Ackley wrote in her drary in 1852, "Brother Jim four years old had moun- tain fever. . . . When he recovered his hair all fell out"9 Dr. John Hudson Wayman, a physician traveling to

    • 290KB
    • 8
  3. Rocky Mountain spotted fever (or "black measles" because of its characteristic rash) was recognized in the early 1800s, and in the last 10 years of the 1800s (1890–1900) it became very common, especially in the Bitterroot Valley of Montana. The disease was originally noted to be concentrated on the west-side of the Bitterroot river. [31]

  4. People also ask

  5. Dec 29, 2020 · Learn about the main causes of death along the Oregon/California/Mormon Pioneer Trails from 1841 to 1869. Mountain fever was one of the diseases that fit the symptoms of intestinal discomfort, respiratory distress, and fever.

  6. Apr 2, 2019 · Learn how medicine and medical treatments changed from the 1800s to the present day. Find out about the dangers of mercury, opium, and quackery, and the challenges of traveling the Oregon Trail with no doctors or hospitals.

  7. Learn about the history, symptoms, and treatment of RMSF, a tick-borne disease first identified in the late 1800s in Montana. Find out how to protect yourself from ticks and where they are most common in the United States.

  8. Brigham Young, the leader of the Mormon exodus, suffered from mountain fever, a form of altitude sickness, while crossing the Rocky Mountains in 1847. Learn about the hardships and triumphs of the Great Mormon Migration from Illinois to Utah.

  1. People also search for