Report of the committee appointed to investigate the causes and extent of the late extraordinary sickness and mortality in the town of Mobile

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Report of the committee appointed to investigate the causes and extent of the late extraordinary sickness and mortality in the town of Mobile

by Mobile (Ala.). Committee on Causes and Extent of the Late Extraordinary Sickness and Mortality in the Town

EN·~25 minutes

Chapters

Description

In the early 1800s a bustling river town was struck by a sudden wave of sickness that left families grieving and merchants shuttering their stalls. A civic committee was convened to uncover the roots of the crisis, setting out to examine every dock, warehouse, and back‑yard that lined the water’s edge. Their report reads like a forensic walk‑through, documenting the grim state of the town’s infrastructure with a calm, methodical eye.

The investigators catalogued rotting timber, piled‑up logs, and swamp‑filled wharves that emitted a foul stench even to the committee members themselves. Stagnant pools collected in abandoned vessels and along narrow streets, while poorly built foundations trapped damp and decay beneath storefronts. By linking these unsanitary conditions to the surge of fever, the report offers a vivid snapshot of how environmental neglect can amplify an epidemic, inviting listeners to step back into a moment when public health was still being defined.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~25 minutes (24K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2020-10-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

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Mobile (Ala.). Committee on Causes and Extent of the Late Extraordinary Sickness and Mortality in the Town

Created by a civic committee in early 19th-century Mobile, this public-health report investigates a deadly outbreak with striking directness. It offers a vivid snapshot of how one American town tried to understand epidemic disease before modern medicine.

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