Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. May 28, 2020 · The 1793 Yellow Fever Epidemic: The Washingtons, Hamilton and Jefferson. May 28, 2020. Posted by: Neely Tucker. This is a guest post by Julie Miller, a historian in the Manuscript Division. Martha Washington, in an unfinished portrait by Gilbert Stuart. Theodor Horydczak Collection. Prints and Photographs Division.

  2. United States. Find Yellow Fever Epidemic Of 1793 stock photos and editorial news pictures from Getty Images. Select from premium Yellow Fever Epidemic Of 1793 of the highest quality.

  3. People also ask

  4. 5. New Orleans; Summer 1853; 8000 or more dead. This outbreak illustrated a racial disparity in yellow fever mortality; 7.4% of white residents died, but only 0.2% of blacks. 6. Norfolk; June-Oct ...

    • American Experience
  5. Mar 26, 2020 · The people Lining listed as susceptible to yellow fever—whites, mulattoes, Native Americans, and people of mixed European and Native American heritage—were born in America or recently arrived from Europe. Lining witnessed blacks who probably survived yellow fever as children in Africa, where the disease was endemic.

  6. 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.

  7. Between August 1 and November 9, 1793, approximately 11,000 people contracted yellow fever in the US capital of Philadelphia. Of that number, 5,000 people, 10 percent of the city’s population, died. The disease gets its name from the jaundiced eyes and skin of the victims.

  8. Yellow fever epidemic in Philadelphia, 1793. Carriages rumbled through the streets to pick up the dying and the dead. Woodcut shows Stephen Girard on...

  1. People also search for