Research Catalog

The Barbary plague : the Black Death in Victorian San Francisco / Marilyn Chase.

Title
The Barbary plague : the Black Death in Victorian San Francisco / Marilyn Chase.
Author
Chase, Marilyn, 1949-
Publication
New York : Random House, 2003.
Supplementary Content
  • Contributor biographical information
  • Publisher description

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library RC176.C2 C48 2003Off-site
TextUse in library Off-site

Details

Description
viii, 276 p. : map; 25 cm.
Summary
"The plague first sailed into San Francisco on the steamer Australia, on the day after New Year's in 1900. Though the ship passed inspection, some of her stowaways - infected rats - escaped detection and made their way into the city's sewer system. Two months later, the first human case of bubonic plague surfaced in Chinatown." "Initially in charge of the government's response was Quarantine Officer Dr. Joseph Kinyoun. An intellectually astute but autocratic scientist, Kinyoun lacked the diplomatic skill to manage the public health crisis successfully. He correctly diagnosed the plague, but because of his quarantine efforts, he was branded an alarmist and a racist, and was forced from his post. When a second epidemic erupted five years later, the more self-possessed and charming Dr. Rupert Blue was placed in command. He won the trust of San Franciscans by shifting the government's attack on the plague from the cool remove of the laboratory onto the streets, among the people it affected. Blue preached sanitation to contain the disease, but it was only when he focused his attack on the newly discovered source of the plague, infected rats and their fleas, that he finally eradicated it - truly one of the great, if little known, triumphs in American public health history."--BOOK JACKET.
Subjects
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. [257]-262) and index.
ISBN
0375504966
LCCN
2002068102
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries