
Cholera strikes New Orleans. Ten percent of the city is killed. Reverend Theodore Clapp performs a minister’s duty amidst the horror. We learn about bizarre treatments. Germ theory is not yet a thing.READ MORE:Autobiographical Sketches and Recollections, during athirty-five years' residence in New Orleans by Theodore ClappThe Cholera Years by Charles E. Rosenberg“Nineteenth Century Public Health in New York and NewOrleans: A Comparison” by John Duffy“Cargo, ‘Infection,’ and the Logic of Quarantine in theNineteenth Century” by Davis S. Barnes“Asiatic Cholera in Louisiana, 1832-1873” by Leland A.LangridgeEncyclopedia of Pestilence, Pandemics, and Plagues editedby Joseph P. Byrne“Outline of the History of Malignant or Asiatic Cholera inNew Orleans, La.” by Joseph Jones“How Yellow Fever Intensified Racial Inequality in19th-Century New Orleans” by Karin WulfSOUNDS:French Quarter Bourbon walk.wav by volivieri -- https://freesound.org/s/110012/ -- License: Attribution 4.0
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