H. Cox Letter
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No requestable containers
Scope and Contents
The collection consists of a letter from H. Cox written on October 17, 1839, in Mt. Vernon, Alabama, his niece Elizabeth (Mrs. James P.) Whitson in Brooklyn, New York. In the letter, Cox describes how the yellow fever epidemic had emptied Mobile. He tells her about the devastation of Mobile - that of the population by the disease and that of city itself by fires, some which were probably set by accident but others which were most likely arson. He says, "The fever depopulated the place - the fire has laid it in ashes."
Dates
- Creation: 1839 October 17
Creator
- Cox, H. (Author, Person)
Biographical / Historical
In 1704, the first case of yellow fever came to Fort Louis de la Mobile, then the chief town of French Louisiana via a ship from the West Indies. Since the 1704 epidemic, there have been almost fifty outbreaks of the disease in Mobile and Alabama. In 1839, the first case occurred on August 11, with the final case reported on October 20. In that one epidemic 450 people died.
Extent
0.01 Linear Feet
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
Letter from uncle in Mt. Vernon, Alabama, to niece in Brooklyn, New York, telling her about the yellow fever outbreak in Mobile.
Provenance
purchased from Ben Katz, 2015
General
To provide faster access to our materials, this finding aid was published without formal and final review. Email us at archives@ua.edu if you find mistakes or have suggestions to make this finding aid more useful for your research.
Processed by
Martha Bace, 2015
Source
- M. Benjamin Katz, Fine Books & Manuscripts (Bookseller, Organization)
- Title
- Guide to the H. Cox Letter
- Status
- Completed
- Date
- July 2015
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
- Language of description note
- English
Repository Details
Part of the The University of Alabama Libraries Special Collections Repository