Flight of the Yellow-Winged Monster

R. S. Huffard
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Abstract

This chapter discusses how railroads became a vector for the spread of yellow fever in a series of epidemics. It focuses first on a devastating outbreak that spread north from New Orleans in 1878 along rail corridors. As southerners realized that railroads were spreading contagion, and as railroad companies refused to halt or shutdown traffic, conflicts between small towns and railroad companies emerged. The next major outbreak in the region, in 1888 in Jacksonville, witnessed widespread “shotgun quarantines,” in which local vigilantes tied up rail traffic. In 1897, Mississippi citizens reacted to an outbreak with violence against railroad infrastructure. Federal and state health officials tried to create boards of health and institute rational quarantine policies but their ultimate failure to control shotgun quarantines reflected a lack of trust in railroad companies and regional anxieties over new railroad connections and circulation. Yellow fever scares like this continued until Walter Reed’s discovery that the mosquito transmitted the disease and the last major outbreak in the region was in 1905.
黄翼怪物的飞行
这一章讨论了铁路如何在一系列流行病中成为黄热病传播的载体。它首先关注的是1878年从新奥尔良沿着铁路走廊向北蔓延的一场毁灭性的疫情。随着南方人意识到铁路正在传播传染病,随着铁路公司拒绝停止或关闭交通,小城镇和铁路公司之间的冲突出现了。1888年,杰克逊维尔爆发了该地区的下一次重大疫情,见证了广泛的“霰弹枪隔离”,当地义务警员封锁了铁路交通。1897年,密西西比市民爆发了针对铁路基础设施的暴力事件。联邦和州卫生官员试图建立卫生委员会,制定合理的检疫政策,但他们最终未能控制强制检疫,反映了对铁路公司缺乏信任,以及地区对新铁路连接和流通的担忧。像这样的黄热病恐慌一直持续到沃尔特·里德(Walter Reed)发现蚊子传播了这种疾病,该地区最后一次大规模爆发是在1905年。
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