Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-7drxs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-17T11:39:54.193Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

African Health at Home and Abroad

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2016

Extract

In the nineteenth century, annual reports of European military medical authorities usually carried some such title as “The Health of the Army at Home and Abroad.” Though historians have recently studied the health of slaves in transit and the demographic patterns of slave populations in the New World, they have not paid much attention to these military data. For the West Indies they begin in 1803, for West Africa in 1810. After 1819, it is possible to trace the disease patterns of West Indian and West African populations in the last decades of the slave trade and on into the early twentieth century. These records help to show what happened epidemiologically to populations of African descent that crossed the Atlantic in both directions.

Type
The Biological Past of the Black
Copyright
Copyright © Social Science History Association 1986 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aufderheide, A. C., Angel, J. L., Kelley, J. O., Outlaw, A. C., Outlaw, M. A., Rapp, G. Jr., and Wittmers, L. E. (1985) “Lead in Bone III. Prediction of Social Correlates From Skeletal Lead Content in Four Colonial American Populations (Catoctin Furnace, College Landing, Governor’s Land, and Irene Mound).” American Journal of Physical Anthropology 66: 353361.Google Scholar
Bruce-Chwatt, L. J. (1980) Essential Malariology. London, England.Google Scholar
Burnet, Sir M. and White, D. O. (1972) Natural History of Infectious Disease. 4th ed. Cambridge, England.Google Scholar
Curtin, P. D. (1968) “The Epidemiology of the Slave Trade.” The Political Science Quarterly 83: 190216.Google Scholar
Curtin, P. D. (1969) The Atlantic Slave Trade: A Census. Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Fogel, R. F. (1984) Nutrition and the Decline of Mortality since 1700: Some Preliminary Findings. Cambridge MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper 1402.Google Scholar
Great Britain Army Medical Service Reports [AMSR] (1840, 1859, 1860, 1861, 1862, 1864, 1871, 1872, 1873, 1874, 1880, 1885, 1890, 1900, 1909, 1911, 1914) London, England.Google Scholar
Great Britain Parliamentary Papers [PP] (1837-1838, 1840) 2 volumes. London, England.Google Scholar
Handler, J., Aufderheide, A. C., Corrucini, R. S., Brandon, E. M., and Wittmers, L. E. Jr. (1986) “Lead Contact and Poisoning in Barbados Slaves: Historical, Chemical, and Biological Evidence.” Social Science History (this issue).Google Scholar
Higman, B. W. (1976) Slave Population and Economy in Jamaica, 1807-1834. Cambridge, England.Google Scholar
Kiple, K. F. (1984) The Caribbean Slave: A Biological History. New York, NY.Google Scholar
Kiple, K. F.and Kiple, V. (1980) “The African Connection: Race, Disease and RacismPhylon 41: 211222.Google Scholar
McKeown, T. (1976) The Modern Rise of Population. New York, NY.Google Scholar
Packard, R. (1983) “White Plague, Black Labor: Industrialization and Tuberculosis in Southern Africa, 1850-1960.” Unpublished paper presented at African Studies Association. Boston, MA (10 December).Google Scholar
Rosenberg, C. E. (1979) “Florence Nightingale on Contagion: The Hospital as a Moral Universe,” in Rosenberg, C. E. (ed.) Healing and History: Essays for Charles Rosen. London and New York.Google Scholar
Smith, D. C. (1976) “Quinine and Fever: The Development of the Effective Dosage.” Journal of the History of Medicine (July): 343367.Google Scholar
Steckel, R. and Jensen, R. (1985) Determinants of Slave and Crew Mortality in the Atlantic Slave Trade, Cambridge, MA, National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper no. 1540.Google Scholar