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The Norfolk Anti-Inoculation Riot on June 27, 1768 was part of a series of riots across the English Colonies in the New World surrounding inoculation against smallpox. Many inhabitants of the colonies were against this relatively new approach to build immunity against smallpox. Inhabitants were afraid that inoculation would infect and kill uninfected communities, but they also objected for political reasons. The riot on June 27, 1768 in Norfolk, Virginia consisted of an anti-inoculation mob invading a plantation where inoculated families resided, ending in the mob driving the families into the local pest house. [1]
When European migration to the New World in the sixteenth century started, smallpox followed, and it infected Natives of the New World and continued to torment European immigrants through the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries in the English colonies. [2] In the early eighteenth century, Boston physician Zabdiel Boylston and New England puritan minister Cotton Mather introduced the method of inoculation adopted from England to combat smallpox. [2] People that had been avoiding smallpox in this time did not agree with this approach to combat it, since they would basically be infected with the sickness they had been avoiding their whole life. [2] While others supporting inoculation thought that the advantages of inoculation outweighed the risks. [2]
Interestingly, pro and anti-inoculation stances also seemed to be defined by political ideology. Dr. Archibald Campbell along with a group of Norfolk gentlemen decided to employ inoculator Dr. John Dalgleish to inoculate them and their families. [3] Dr. Dalgleish published an article in the Virginia Gazette in support of inoculation, declaring smallpox an epidemic since ships coming from the West Indies constantly brought infected people to the area. [3] The public of Norfolk blamed this epidemic on inoculation rather than the ships, and opposed inoculation altogether. [3] Dr. Campbell was a Loyalist, and was the only Loyalist physician in Norfolk. [3] While leaders of anti-inoculation groups, Maximillian Calvert and Paul Loyal, were Patriots, along with every other physician in Norfolk, who opposed inoculation as well. [3] During this time, the colonies were still controlled by the British Crown, Loyalists remained loyal to the crown during the Revolutionary War while Patriots were in favor of independence. Word got out in Norfolk about Dr.Campbell's inoculation plans , and anti-inoculationists attempted to have the magistrate stop them, when this didn't work, they arranged a meeting between the anti-inoculationists and pro-inoculationists in Mrs. Ross's Tavern in Norfolk. [3] Tensions were not eased after this meeting, but Dr.Campbell agreed to postpone any inoculation plans until after a local court case was finished, which was set to finish in the following months. [4]
Following the local court case, anti-inoculation groups continued to pressure heads of family to not inoculate their families and those who were already inoculated to leave town, since Dr. Campbell's family had been inoculated a few days after the court was adjourned. [4] Inoculated families were being housed in Dr. Campbell's plantation during the recovery period. Anti-inoculationists proposed that inoculated families be moved from Dr. Campbell's plantation to the local pest house to prevent infection. Dr. Campbell and Norfolk Mayor Cornelius Calvert agreed to the proposition. But before a plan to move those inoculated was formulated, Joseph Calvert, an anti-inoculationist, put a mob together in order to take care of the transfer themselves. [4]
On the evening of June 27, 1768, the mob went to the Campbell plantation. Once they arrived to the plantation, one of the mob leaders, Paul Loyal, proposed a truce between them and the people in the plantation, and those in the plantation agreed. [5] When the plantation inhabitants put their arms down, the mob, mostly intoxicated, invaded the plantation and rushed the inhabitants to vacate the property. [5] Magistrates were present in the riot, but made no efforts to stop the mob. [5] Those that were inoculated in the plantation were in no condition to move at that moment since many had fevers and other side effects. This forced family-heads to plead with the mob to give them time. The multitude declared: "if the people weren't in condition to leave the inoculation house they should have thought of that before they were inoculated". [5] The mob led the families by foot to the local pest house, in the middle of a thunderstorm. Once the inoculated families were settled, the mob returned to town and broke the windows of the houses of the many inoculationists present in the Campbell plantation. [5]
Following the riot, Mayor Cornelius Calvert moved to press charges against those involved in the June 27 riot. [5] Maximilian Calvert and Paul Loyal dodged charges and fines and Joseph Calvert denied his involvement in the riot, resulting in no one being convicted. [5] Tensions between Joseph Calvert and Dr. Campbell continued. It was reported that they had a fight after the riot, but there were no substantial injuries to either party. [6] Letters were published in the Virginia Gazette showing sympathy to the inoculated families attacked during the riot. After the Calvert-Campbell fight and the Virginia Gazette letters, tensions died down for the rest of the year. [6]
In April 1769, the same anti-inoculation crowd aimed to press charges against Dr. Dalgleish and those inoculated the. year prior, and a hearing was held. [6] The hearing was unsuccessful, since the only charges anti-inoculationists could bring against Dr. Dalgleish were those of inoculation itself. Since inoculation wasn't illegal, nothing came of the hearing. [6] Following this hearing, a ship belonging to Mayor Calvert entered the Norfolk port, reportedly with 3 apprentices and their slaves who had contracted smallpox. [7] One of the apprentices died at sea. While the other 2 apprentices were recovering, Mayor Calvert had Dr. Dalgleish inoculate their slaves. [7] An anti-inoculationist that participated in the June 27th riot heard about these inoculations, and put another mob together and attacked Mayor Calvert's house, where they arrested Dr. Dalgleish. [7]
The Province of Maryland was an English and later British colony in North America from 1634 until 1776, when the province was one of the Thirteen Colonies that joined in supporting the American Revolution against Great Britain. In 1781, Maryland was the 13th signatory to the Articles of Confederation. The province's first settlement and capital was in St. Mary's City, located at the southern end of St. Mary's County, a peninsula in the Chesapeake Bay bordered by four tidal rivers.
Jan Ingenhousz FRS was a Dutch-British physiologist, biologist and chemist.
Patriots, also known as Revolutionaries, Continentals, Rebels, or Whigs, were colonists in the Thirteen Colonies who opposed the Kingdom of Great Britain's control and governance during the colonial era, and supported and helped launch the American Revolution that ultimately established American independence. Patriot politicians led colonial opposition to British policies regarding the American colonies, eventually building support for the adoption of the Declaration of Independence, which was adopted unanimously by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776. After the American Revolutionary War began the year before, in 1775, many patriots assimilated into the Continental Army, which was commanded by George Washington and which secured victory against the British Army, leading the British to acknowledge the sovereign independence of the colonies, reflected in the Treaty of Paris, which led to the establishment of the United States in 1783.
The New World of the Western Hemisphere was devastated by the 1775–1782 North American smallpox epidemic. Estimates based on remnant settlements say at least 130,000 people were estimated to have died in the epidemic that started in 1775.
The Maryland Loyalists Battalion, also known as the First Battalion of Maryland Loyalists, was a Loyalist infantry unit which served on the side of the Kingdom of Great Britain during the American Revolutionary War. Raised in 1777 by Loyalist officer James Chalmers, the unit, consisting of one battalion, was organizationally part of the British Provincial Corps and saw action at the 1778 Battle of Monmouth and the 1781 Siege of Pensacola. It was disbanded in 1783 in the wake of the Patriot victory in the war.
Smallpox was an infectious disease caused by variola virus, which belongs to the genus Orthopoxvirus. The last naturally occurring case was diagnosed in October 1977, and the World Health Organization (WHO) certified the global eradication of the disease in 1980, making smallpox the only human disease to have been eradicated to date.
Disease in colonial America that afflicted the early immigrant settlers was a dangerous threat to life. Some of the diseases were new and treatments were ineffective. Malaria was deadly to many new arrivals, especially in the Southern colonies. Of newly arrived able-bodied young men, over one-fourth of the Anglican missionaries died within five years of their arrival in the Carolinas. Mortality was high for infants and small children, especially for diphtheria, smallpox, yellow fever, and malaria. Most sick people turned to local healers, and used folk remedies. Others relied upon the minister-physicians, barber-surgeons, apothecaries, midwives, and ministers; a few used colonial physicians trained either in Britain, or an apprenticeship in the colonies. One common treatment was blood letting. The method was crude due to a lack of knowledge about infection and disease among medical practitioners. There was little government control, regulation of medical care, or attention to public health. By the 18th century, Colonial physicians, following the models in England and Scotland, introduced modern medicine to the cities in the 18th century, and made some advances in vaccination, pathology, anatomy and pharmacology.
The history of smallpox extends into pre-history. Genetic evidence suggests that the smallpox virus emerged 3,000 to 4,000 years ago. Prior to that, similar ancestral viruses circulated, but possibly only in other mammals, and possibly with different symptoms. Only a few written reports dating from about 500 AD to 1000 AD are considered reliable historical descriptions of smallpox, so understanding of the disease prior to that has relied on genetics and archaeology. However, during the 2nd millennium AD, especially starting in the 16th century, reliable written reports become more common. The earliest physical evidence of smallpox is found in the Egyptian mummies of people who died some 3,000 years ago. Smallpox has had a major impact on world history, not least because indigenous populations of regions where smallpox was non-native, such as the Americas and Australia, were rapidly and greatly reduced by smallpox during periods of initial foreign contact, which helped pave the way for conquest and colonization. During the 18th century the disease killed an estimated 400,000 Europeans each year, including five reigning monarchs, and was responsible for a third of all blindness. Between 20 and 60% of all those infected—and over 80% of infected children—died from the disease.
George Hume Steuart, (1700–1784) was a Scottish physician, tobacco planter, and Loyalist politician in colonial Maryland. Born in Perthshire, Steuart emigrated to Maryland in around 1721, where he benefited from proprietarial patronage and was appointed to a number of colonial offices, eventually becoming a wealthy landowner with estates in both Maryland and Scotland, and serving two terms as mayor of Annapolis. However, he was forced by the outbreak of the American Revolution to decide whether to remain loyal to the Crown or to throw in his lot with the American rebels. In 1775 Steuart sailed to Scotland, deciding at age 75 that "he could not turn rebel in his old age". He remained there until his death in 1784.
In 1767, the 11-year-old composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was struck by smallpox. Like all smallpox victims, he was at serious risk of dying, but he survived the disease. This article discusses smallpox as it existed in Mozart's time, the decision taken in 1764 by Mozart's father Leopold not to inoculate his children against the disease, the course of Mozart's illness, and the aftermath.
Azor Betts was an American Loyalist medical doctor who began his practice in the Province of New York before the American Revolutionary War. His staunch defense of smallpox inoculation and support of the Loyalist cause led to his arrest and eventual departure to Canada.
Benedict Swingate Calvert was a planter, politician and a Loyalist in Maryland during the American Revolution. He was the son of Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore, the third Proprietor Governor of Maryland (1699–1751). His mother's identity is not known, though one source speculates that she was Melusina von der Schulenburg, Countess of Walsingham. As he was illegitimate, he was not able to inherit his father's title or estates, which passed instead to his half brother Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore (1731–1771). Benedict Calvert spent most of his life as a politician, judge and planter in Maryland, though Frederick, by contrast, never visited the colony. Calvert became wealthy through proprietarial patronage and became an important colonial official, but he would lose his offices and his political power, though not his land and wealth, during the American Revolution.
Then Province of Maryland had been a British / English colony since 1632, when Sir George Calvert, first Baron of Baltimore and Lord Baltimore (1579-1632), received a charter and grant from King Charles I of England and first created a haven for English Roman Catholics in the New World, with his son, Cecilius Calvert (1605-1675), the second Lord Baltimore equipping and sending over the first colonists to the Chesapeake Bay region in March 1634. The first signs of rebellion against the mother country occurred in 1765, when the tax collector Zachariah Hood was injured while landing at the second provincial capital of Annapolis docks, arguably the first violent resistance to British taxation in the colonies. After a decade of bitter argument and internal discord, Maryland declared itself a sovereign state in 1776. The province was one of the Thirteen Colonies of British America to declare independence from Great Britain and joined the others in signing a collective Declaration of Independence that summer in the Second Continental Congress in nearby Philadelphia. Samuel Chase, William Paca, Thomas Stone, and Charles Carroll of Carrollton signed on Maryland's behalf.
Elizabeth Calvert was the daughter of Maryland Governor Captain Charles Calvert and Rebecca Gerard, and a wealthy heiress in colonial Maryland. Her parents died when she was young, leaving her their substantial fortune. In 1748, aged 17, she married her cousin Benedict Swingate Calvert, a Loyalist politician and planter and the illegitimate son of Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore. Benedict's connections to the ruling Calvert family allowed him to benefit from considerable proprietarial patronage, until the American Revolution saw the overthrow of British rule and the end of Calvert power in Maryland. Benedict and Elizabeth had to pay triple taxes after the war's end but, unlike many loyalists, their lands and fortune remained unconfiscated.
The Essex Hospital was a privately built smallpox inoculation hospital on Cat Island where many people were effectively inoculated against smallpox in 1773–1774. About a year after it opened, it was burned to the ground by paranoid and angry townspeople of Marblehead, Massachusetts.
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The Massachusetts smallpox epidemic or colonial epidemic was a smallpox outbreak that hit Massachusetts in 1633. Smallpox outbreaks were not confined to 1633 however, and occurred nearly every ten years. Smallpox was caused by two different types of variola viruses: variola major and variola minor. The disease was hypothesized to be transmitted due to an increase in the immigration of European settlers to the region who brought Old World smallpox aboard their ships.
Andrew Sprowle was a Scottish-born merchant, naval agent, landowner, shipyard owner, slaveholder and slave trader in Portsmouth, Virginia. Today Andrew Sprowle is best remembered for establishing the Gosport Ship Yard, now known as Norfolk Naval Shipyard. Sprowle emigrated from Milton, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland to what is currently the Commonwealth of Virginia in the mid-18th century, where he lived until his death on 29 May 1776.
The Battle of Gwynn's Island saw Andrew Lewis lead patriot soldiers from Virginia against John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore's small naval squadron and British loyalist troops. In this American Revolutionary War action, accurate cannon fire from the nearby Virginia mainland persuaded Dunmore to abandon his base at Gwynn's Island. While camping on the island, the loyalists suffered heavy mortality from smallpox and an unknown fever, particularly among the escaped slaves that Dunmore recruited to fight against the American rebels. Gwynn's Island is located on the western shore of Chesapeake Bay in Mathews County, Virginia.
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