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Yellow fever targeted the green - Outbreaks in southern US affected Irish immigrants greatly

Hundreds of Irish perished as a result of the mosquito borne fever in Savannah Georgia


Irish immigrants who moved to the Southern US states in the 1800s
Irish immigrants who moved to the Southern US states in the 1800s
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New research conducted by an English historian has found why a yellow fever outbreak in the 19th century wiped out hundreds of Irish immigrants in the US.

A viral infection spread by mosquitoes, yellow fever is common in South America and in sub-Saharan Africa. Symptoms include fever, coma, seizures, vomiting, and organ failure.

ScienceBlog reports almost half of the 650 people killed by yellow fever in Savannah Georgia in 1854 were Irish immigrants. As new arrivals to the country, the Irish were more susceptible to mosquito bites.

After examining the burial, hospital, and news records of Savannah between August and November of 1854, University of Warwick historian Dr Tim Lockley found that out of the 650 victims of yellow fever, 293 were Irish immigrants

Savannah doctor Phineas Kollock said at the time: ‘..the extremely hot weather . . . has at length developed yellow fever among our Irish population. The disease is mostly confined to the Eastern part of the city. I do not feel apprehensive of its extending its ravages very much, although it is probable that we shall have cases occurring until frost.”

According to the records, 23-year-old Irishman Bartholomew Stephens had only been in Savannah for two weeks when he died of yellow fever on 17 October and 25-year-old Michael Bennet lasted just ten days before he died on 23 October.

The historian found another key factor was that the Aedes aegytpi mosquito that caused the disease was more active during the day. This particular breed of mosquito was also drawn to exposed perspiring flesh. Many Irish immigrants at that time worked as laborers and worked in the sun all day long.

Dr Lockley said: “Yellow fever certainly was a ‘strangers’ disease’ but not because strangers were not acclimatized to living in Savannah. Rather, it was a ‘strangers’ disease’ because strangers were also disproportionately male, in their twenties, working outside, and resided in neighbourhoods close to low swampy ground where mosquitoes thrived and in Savannah’s case a very large number of the ‘strangers’ in this position were newly arrived Irish.”


Nster.com


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Dr. Lockley's conclusion is total nonsense. If you survive yellow fever, you are immune to it for the rest of your life - that's why the vaccine works. The newly arrived Irish would have never been exposed to yellow fever, so they would never have developed any resistance to the disease. So of course they caught yellow fever at a higher rate than residents who had been exposed to the disease. It nothing to do with where they lived or what hours they worked and everything to do with the antibodies that were not in their bloodstreams.
sir peter: How about you take the lead of your fellow racist ciaradexy and quit posting here? You have nothing to offer but bigotry.
Rednecks - yellow fever? Should 'ave worked the night shift. Anyone ever heard of redskins getting it? The guy to the left of the back row standing looks a bit like Michael Collins - in a previous incarnation. I'm tellin' ya! That guy has had a busy few lives.
Every disease targets the poor most of all..This research is bullsh*t.It only stand to reason.Even in modern day life.The poorer your diet and how run down you are the more prone anybody is to disease.Newly arrived Irish working like slaves.Here we go again on IC..Making out the Irish were victims..Crap!!
Woundedknee, I'm sure the guy on the right with the beard and no mustache is Allen Pinkerton.
On second thoughts, are those guys in the pic Pinkerton agents? This is going to be under my skin till I identify them. No Civil War buffs out there?
To get an accurate, non-biased account of fellow fever, read "The American Plague" by Molly Caldwell Crosby of Johns Hopkins University. Yellow fever killed 100,000 Americans in port towns along the Mississippi R. and the coast from Texas to Rhode Island. In 1878, 5000 people died in Memphis, TN, 1/3 of the pop. The y.f. virus originated in West Africa and came to the U.S. via the slave ships. It was (Dr.) Maj. Walter Reed who led the research, discovering how the disease was spread.
Wounded Knee is right as it was also a plague during the building of the Panama Canal. We have been to beautiful Savannah and love the city. We have even been there for St. Patrick's day. Many of the Irish immigrants arrived half starved, so I am sure many of them also died from being so weak and forced to do such hard labor. The parade we attended was very sad as we saw surviving families marching with banners carrying their family names. The natives of Savannah asked the Irish to join them in the Confederate Army. The Irish, having no choice, said they would if they could have their own regiment. As everyone knows the Irish have always had a special way of fighting which they passed on to the American Army. When a leader fell, the next man took over. After the war in which they were a valiant regiment, the Irish were completely accepted in Savannah. They built their own schools, hospitals and even an orphanage as so many parents died young or were killed. On another note, I am sure everyone knows there were Irish in Maryland and Virginia from colonial times and they were very instrumental in the American Revolutionary War. They were also Catholics as the English King gave the Catholics land where they could live in peace. They gave it the very Catholic name of Maryland, but they also extended into Virginia.
I am pretty sure I've seen that picture before. Unfortunately can't remember where, but I think it shows CSA soldiers. As regards Yellow Fever, Savannah's biggest outbreak was in 1820. Elsewhere New Orleans was the city most ravaged by it. It hit northern cities too--Philadelphia was especially susceptible, maybe because it had links down the coast to Charleston and Savannah and from there down into the Caribbean.
 




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