Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Old records shed new light on 18th century outbreaks

- By William J. Kole

BOSTON — A highly contagious disease originatin­g far from America’s shores triggers deadly outbreaks that spread rapidly, infecting the masses. Shots are available, but a divided public agonizes over getting jabbed.

Sound familiar? Newly digitized records — including a minister’s diary scanned and posted online by Boston’s Congregati­onal Library and Archives — are shedding fresh light on devastatin­g outbreaks of smallpox that hit the city in the 1700s.

And three centuries later, the parallels with the coronaviru­s pandemic are uncanny.

“How little we’ve changed,” said CLA archivist Zachary Bodnar, who led the digitizati­on effort, working closely with the New England Historic Genealogic­al Society.

“The fact that we’re finding these similariti­es in the records of our past is a very interestin­g parallel,” he added.

Smallpox was eradicated, but not before it sickened and killed millions worldwide. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say the last natural outbreak of smallpox in the United States occurred in 1949. In 1980, the World Health Organizati­on’s decision-making arm declared it eradicated, and no cases of naturally occurring smallpox have been reported since.

But in April 1721, after an English ship, the HMS Seahorse, brought it to Boston, it was a clear and present danger. By winter of 1722, it would infect more than half of the city’s population of 11,000 and kill 850.

Much earlier outbreaks, also imported from Europe, killed Native Americans

indiscrimi­nately in the 1600s. Now, digitized church records are helping to round out the picture of how the colonists coped when it was their turn to endure pestilence.

The world’s first proper vaccinatio­n didn’t occur until an English country doctor named Edward Jenner inoculated an 8-year-old boy against smallpox in 1796.

Before then, doctors used inoculatio­n, or variolatio­n as it was often called, introducin­g a trace amount of the smallpox virus into the skin. The procedure, or variations of it, had been practiced since ancient times in Asia. Jenner’s pioneering of vaccinatio­n, using instead a less lethal strain of the virus that infected cows, was a huge scientific advance.

Yet just as with COVID19 vaccines in 2021, some took a skeptical view of smallpox inoculatio­ns in the 18th century, digitized documents show. Early smallpox treatments, while effective in many who were inoculated, sickened or even killed others.

The Rev. Cotton Mather, one of the era’s most influentia­l ministers, had actively promoted inoculatio­n. In a sign of how resistant some colonists were to the new technology, someone tossed an explosive device through his window in November 1721. It did not explode.

Among the recently digitized Congregati­onal Church records are handwritte­n diary entries scrawled by the Rev. Ebenezer Storer, a pastor in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts. On March 11, 1764, as smallpox once again raged through Boston, Storer penned a prayer in his journal after arranging to have his own children inoculated.

The deeply devout Storer had faith in science.

“Blessed be thy name for any discoverie­s that have been made to soften the severity of the distemper. Grant thy blessing on the means used,” he wrote.

Three weeks later, Storer gave thanks to God “for his great mercy to me in recovering my dear children and the others in my family from the smallpox.”

 ?? AMERICAN ANCESTORS & NEW ENGLAND HISTORIC GENEALOGIC­AL SOCIETY ?? A digitized copy of a page from a handwritte­n 18th century diary by the Rev. Ebenezer Storer.
AMERICAN ANCESTORS & NEW ENGLAND HISTORIC GENEALOGIC­AL SOCIETY A digitized copy of a page from a handwritte­n 18th century diary by the Rev. Ebenezer Storer.

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