Special Delivery
In the 1900s, health officials believed that puncturing supposedly disease-infested mail and then fumigating it slowed the spread of illness
- By Ed Leibowitz
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
In 2001, more than a century after that letter was written, two Washington, D.C. postal workers died from exposure to airborne anthrax. "For so many years, it was feared that the mail could bring disease, and it turned out it had not," says historian Pope. "Then, with the nationwide anthrax scare, we find that, yes, mail can become an instrument for carrying death."
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Comments (2)
There is a cemetary in Rockford that has alot of children,babies and infants buried in it and the dates on their head stones is back in the early 1800's.
I am wondering and trying to find out if there was an outbreak or epidemic of some kind that caused these children and babies to die. :(
It was a very sad feeling to see grave after grave and knowing that many little children and babies died in that time.
Does anyone know of an outbreak of disease's or epidemic etc. that occured in the early 1800's in Alabama?
Posted by Cara on September 8,2009 | 10:16 PM
I have 2 1897 the nation witness magzine vol.27 would you be interisted in them.
Posted by mark yates on May 8,2008 | 02:35 PM