Probably only the older Americans alive today have personally experienced being quarantined. A "quarantine" is a situation where people, animals or produce are isolated to keep them separate from others, with the hope of preventing the spread of an infectious or contagious disease.
In New Hampshire's colonial days, a forty- or fifty- day quarantine was sometimes placed on a ship whose crew or passengers arrived infected with contagious disorders. These individuals either had to remain on the ship they traveled in, or sometimes a quarantine station (or lazaret) was maintained. These lazarets could be ships permanently at anchor, isolated islands or mainland buildings built and maintained specifically for this purpose.
Often times a "Quarantine flag," (a yellow flag) was/is hoisted at the fore of a vessel or hung from a building, to give warning of an infectious disease. This flag was also called also the "yellow jack." [Note: "yellow jack" is also a nickname for yellow fever].
During the mid 1700s, ships carrying those infected with the "plague," small-pox, influenza, yellow fever and other serious disorders was still a real issue. In 1763, according to the New-Hampshire Gazette, one "Jennins" of Newbury MA left the sloop "Bagley" while it was still under quarantine for small-pox, at Portsmouth. A notice was published in the newspaper cautioning "persons of entertaining said Jennins."
Perhaps one of the oddest cases of quarantine occurred in 1924, when a Connecticut girl who was spending the summer in Maine, contracted polio. In order to take her back home to Connecticut (which they did using a secluded railroad car), her cabin was taped off at the Hew Hampshire border, and again checked that it was secure in Massachusetts. Since much of polio's spread was through people whose symptoms were not so apparent, the great effort expended was ill advised.
Janice
*Additional Reading*
-List of Epidemics (Encyclopedia of Genealogy)-
-Quarantine and Isolation, Law-Related Materials (Current)-
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New Hampshire Glossary: Quarantine
Comments
Re: New Hampshire Glossary: Quarantine
by
Jasia
on Wed 26 Sep 2007 07:28 AM EDT | Permanent Link
I remember my mom telling a story about her family's house being quarantined. I think it was when she had diptheria. That would have been back in late 1920s or early 1930s here in Detroit. And just recently (in the last couple years) my brother was asked to voluntarily act as though his house was quarantined by his doctor due to a positive TB test. He was put on medication and retested in a few days and pronounced healthy. (Probably a false positive on the first test.) But his house would have been officially quarantined if he'd had a second positive test. So it still happens.
Re: Re: New Hampshire Glossary: Quarantine
by
Janice Brown
on Wed 26 Sep 2007 09:47 AM EDT | Permanent Link
Jasia,
I find it fascinating that the doctor quarantined him at home, and did not place him in the hospital in an isolation room. Thanks for sharing that info, I had no idea that the medical community was still doing that. And yes back in the 1920s families not only with diphtheria, but also with polio were also quarantined. Re: New Hampshire Glossary: Quarantine
by
Terry Thornton
on Wed 26 Sep 2007 03:51 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Janice, This is interesting reading --- and brings back a lot of memories from summers when polio epidemics would spread across the South. Within my wife's larger family were two cases of quarantine. The most recent, 1952, in Memphis, Tennessee, when a family member in late summer developed polio. The entire household was quarantined for a period of time. The other case was from 1945 when a family member in Marmaduke, Arkansas, contacted Scarlet fever and the family quarantined for a short period of time. I can't imagine the fear, back before the germ theory of disease was fully established, of entire towns being quarantined with some of the plagues that used to strike. Thanks for such an interesting post.
Terry Thornton Hill Country of Monroe County, Mississippi (blog) Re: Re: New Hampshire Glossary: Quarantine
by
Anonymous
on Wed 26 Sep 2007 11:15 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Terry,
During the 18th and 19th century people had very good reason to be fearful. Entire families were sometimes wiped out by diseases which we now rarely see. Strange how one disease is conquered and another moves in to take its place. Thank you for mentioning the quarantines in the 50s. Janice Re: New Hampshire Glossary: Quarantine
by
Becky Wiseman
on Wed 26 Sep 2007 11:39 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Interesting article Janice. My great-grandfather's family was quarantined in 1905 when scarlet fever was making its rounds in northern Indiana. He had been confined to his house with his wife and seven children for 10 days when he pulled a gun on the visiting physician!
Re: Re: New Hampshire Glossary: Quarantine
by
Janice Brown
on Wed 26 Sep 2007 11:50 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Wow Beckly ROFL!
Did you inherit those feisty genes? :D :D I did get a chuckle out of that story. I felt bad for the doctor... he's lucky he didn't have a heart attack on the spot. Janice Re: New Hampshire Glossary: Quarantine
by
Lori Thornton
on Thu 27 Sep 2007 08:10 PM EDT | Permanent Link
During the big flu epidemic of 1918, my grandfather's brother, Abe Lantz, died in Texarkana, Arkansas. They really wanted to bring the body back to Mississippi for burial, but because of the quarantine in place, he was buried at State Line Cemetery in Texarkana.
Re: Re: New Hampshire Glossary: Quarantine
by
Janice
on Thu 27 Sep 2007 08:20 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Lori, with the number of people who were dying, it is not a surprise that many folks who died away from home were not buried where they might have otherwise. The Spanish Flu Pandemic was killing healthy young people.... 50 million to 100 million people worldwide died, possibly more than that taken by the Black Death.
If it happened now we would be screaming that it was the result of a plot! Thank you for reminding me and other readers about the quarantines during 1918-1919. Janice Trackbacks
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