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Scotland (Counties as in 1851-1901) => Scotland => Argyllshire => Topic started by: DuncanM on Tuesday 04 July 06 11:06 BST (UK)

Title: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: DuncanM on Tuesday 04 July 06 11:06 BST (UK)
Hi,

Anyone know where I could find out more about an epidemic (possibly cholera) in Campbeltown area, round about 1848.

Thanks

Duncan
Title: Re: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: Gadget on Tuesday 04 July 06 12:16 BST (UK)
Hi Duncan

There was an epidemic of cholera around that time. It started in Scotland in 1848 and spread throughout the UK. See:

http://www.ph.ucla.edu/epi/snow/intjepidemiology31_908_911_2002.pdf

There was also a worldwide flu epidemic then.

With Campletown being a port, it could have been either.

Gadget
Title: Re: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: DuncanM on Tuesday 04 July 06 13:33 BST (UK)
Thanks Gadget,

I have a number of deaths in one family noted on the father's death certificate in 1855, the date for the childrens deaths are all given as 1848. I've tried Scotlands People but the date is too early for records and I can't find any other record of how they died so I think they may fallen to an epidimec.


Duncan
Title: Re: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: chrissy on Wednesday 05 July 06 01:39 BST (UK)
 morning all :)
   Ive found this topic really interesting,considering I have  Davidsons in Dunoon,and coudnt find deaths :(,they were young children.
 Would there be any maps or info regarding the spread of this epidemic in scotland,which counties were affected the most.
  Thanks gadget :)....you learn something new every day.
                         cheers from chrissy.
Title: Re: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: Gadget on Wednesday 05 July 06 08:53 BST (UK)
Hi Chrissy

I'm glad you found it inteesting. There might be maps but as far as I can remember it spread throughout the country and then into England and Wales. Youc ould try some clever googling - include a +maps for example.

Remember that this was also a time when there were fairly regular famines and the Highlands Clearances were still underway.

I'm a great enthusiast of looking at the historical context of our ancestors.

Gadget
Title: Re: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: chrissy on Tuesday 11 July 06 11:20 BST (UK)
Evening .......                                                                                                    I hope this may be an interesting read on the subject.....with some names of casualties.
         
http://www.old-merseytimes.co.uk/EpidemicGen.html


 love chrissy

Moderator Comment : url updated to show link
Title: Re: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: Gadget on Tuesday 11 July 06 11:38 BST (UK)
That's a really super link Chrissy - thanks very much. It gives an insight about the spread throughtout the UK - port to port and centre to centre. It also gives a sad insight into the way poor children were treated.

Some of my collateral relatives died of it in Willenhall and I suspect, though can't find a death cert., that my 3 x great grandmother, Catherine Stokes, died of it also.

Gadget
Title: Re: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: catmac on Friday 20 October 06 22:04 BST (UK)
I am researching the cholera epidemics in Britain in 1832 & 1848. The records for Campbeltown are held at the Archives of Argyll & Bute Council, at Manse Brae, Lochgilphead.
The 1832 epidemic started in Sunderland, and spread throughout the UK.
Catherine
Title: Re: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: Iain... on Wednesday 11 June 14 17:04 BST (UK)
Lol... 8 years late with this !   For RootsChat I have convinced myself that the following is a record !  :D

Much of the following has been taken from 'Kintyre - The Hidden Past' by Angus Martin. "Destitution, Disease and Death." 

Pig-Keeping :   
The keeping of pigs in south Kintyre, (Doories or Doorkies) - occupied a special role in Campbeltown's domestic economy for hundreds of years. 
The custom proved very difficult to break because pigs were not merely food and income for the population, but in many households, they were also treated as pets and gained the favour and affection from the children.
A great many pigs enjoyed complete freedom and like the dogs, prowled the town as they pleased.   No doubt they performed a useful service as scavengers but the quantity of dung they dropped through the streets must have been great, and as great a nuisance.
The number of pigs kept in the town on one count alone had been calculated at between 1500 and 2000.
Anecdote :   
Pigs often met with fatal accidents while falling from first or second floor windows; and a story about one particular Campbeltown woman who kept a massive boar in her attic became the talk of the town.   One day, its head was seen peering out of an attic window by a passer-by.   Fascinated, he asked the woman how she had managed to get it up all the stairs.   "Up the stairs" she exclaimed..., "he's never been doon the stairs" she added !

In 1835 at Dalintober, pigs were allowed to be kept in the houses of the poorer inhabitants and could be seen revelling in all the luxury of accumulated mud and filth upon the road; and a few minutes later, they'd be enjoying themselves stretched out before a log fire with their filthy carcasses steaming perspiration and effluent.   
Also, the free-ranging pigs of Dalintober relished 'pottle'! (pot-ale, or the effluent from the first distillation of whisky)    They'd be seen frequently indulging themselves at the Pottle Hole, a sandy basin in the Mussel Ebb, opposite Princes Street.    Dalintober distilleries had the habit of discharging their waste into this stream, which welled up at the Hole and the pigs would wander in for a drink.

In October 1853, the appearance of cholera in Kintyre had been anticipated and precautions began to be enforced.   On the 26th of that month, a special meeting of the parochial board was convened at which an 'active and efficient' committee was appointed. 
That committee met the following day and began its preparations.   An 'Inspector of Cleansing' was chosen; the town and parish was divided into districts with a supervisory committee appointed to each district; and a depot was created from which supplies of free lime were to be issued to the poor. (to be used for washing their houses)   
Medicines for bowel complaints were, by arrangement with the town 'druggists' to be given free, not only to the poor but also to any person whose ability to pay was doubtful.   A proclamation was then issued 'calling upon the inhabitants to cleanse and purify their houses and premises.'   
By the 1st of February 1854 - with the community gripped fast in the epidemic and already 17 deaths - the cleaning of the burgh was well advanced; but the scale of the operation had been overwhelming and as such, certain aspects still remained unfinished.   

More than 700 cartloads of dung had been removed from the town and numerous derelict buildings cleared out and bricked up.   
Two medical officers had been employed at the remarkable fee of two guineas each per day and a soup kitchen had been established with the happiest results.   
Legal action had been taken against no fewer than 24 individuals for the non-removal of swine and pigsties.   

The custom continued in Campbeltown !   In 1866, Mary McMillan or McKinven - "a widow presently in the custody of the police" - was charged that she "did keep swine in the house occupied by her as a dwelling-house in, or near the lane between Kirk Street and Shore Street."   
However, short memories followed the epidemics, with the council withdrawing from suggestions that "poor people should be compelled to put away their pigs or cows."   Reasoning that their removal would take away a principal stimulus to industry and the economy for the poorer classes.   
That argument was echoed more than 60 years on in 1911, when Peter McGown in Dalaruan, appeared at court on a charge of "keeping in the vicinity of his dwelling-house, sixteen pigs which are a nuisance and an annoyance to the inhabits of the neighbourhood."   The case provoked an angry response from one A. McLeod, who claimed victimisation in the action.   His letter to the Campbeltown court was headed...
"Man's inhumanity to man":   
It went on...
"These two poor old people have been in the habit of keeping a number of pigs for years back, and no one has ever objected to the 'intolerable nuisance' caused by the swine until one or two extra fastidious personages got anchored in Dalaruan; and their patrician code of morality did not include the herding of swine in their immediate environment.    Now, when these apostles of sanitation have succeeded in taking away the means of livelihood from these poor old folk, what steps are they going to take to help them eke out an existence, precarious at all times, but more so now than ever.   

The practice of Campbeltown pig keeping lingered on in the domestic economy of Campbeltown until WW2.   
Title: Re: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: Iain... on Wednesday 11 June 14 17:06 BST (UK)
I add this because the above was word-limited...
With many of my timelines, I try, when possible, to add aspects relative to national events, environment or even period costumes..., in order to get a better perception of the life and times of the person being researched.   However, the following (above) was to upset my 'frilly vision' of summer hats, long dresses and trimmings that go towards a 'clean-living' society and a healthy environment... 1853    Little did I know !   

Note:  Longrow, Campbeltown :   I distinctly remember my Granny Black (father; Robert MacFarlane McArthur and living at Dalaruan as a butcher) preciously separating household waste.   Not for ecological reasons as we do today, but in order to give it all to the man climbing the stairs with a 'swill-bin' over his shoulder to feed the familys' pigs behind the Low Askomil Road..., where Robert's father had built a house.
Title: Re: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: fifer1947 on Wednesday 09 July 14 21:12 BST (UK)
This may help  http://www.victorianweb.org/science/health/health10.html
Title: Re: Epidemic in Campbeltown 1848?
Post by: marcie dean on Tuesday 23 September 14 19:37 BST (UK)
there is a magazine which used to have a link on here which had a lot of information  about an epidemic and they placed all the bodies in the local church and burned it to the ground they had been using it as a hospital but to many to care for and mostly wives and children no time registered deaths nor dig  graves no time for that they just wanted to stop it from spreading any more. so they cleansed the town this way
cant remember the author though historian etc. florry Campbell who went to America caught in a battle and brought back to Scotland by a relly angus a captain of his own fishing trawlwer fetched them all back.
Marjorie . I know I will kick myself the moment that someone comes up with the name because its logged in my memory somewhere Campbell and mcdonalds etc.