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SMALLPOX BAY

  • Smallpox Bay
  • Smallpox Bay is a bay on the west side of San Juan Island in the U.S. state of Washington. Smallpox Bay was named for the fact that a group of indigenous

    Smallpox Bay

    Smallpox_Bay

  • 1862 Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic
  • Disease outbreak in North America

    The 1862 Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic was a major outbreak of smallpox that began in Victoria, on Vancouver Island, and quickly spread among Indigenous

    1862 Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic

    1862_Pacific_Northwest_smallpox_epidemic

  • Smallpox
  • Eradicated viral disease

    Smallpox was an infectious disease caused by Variola virus (often called Smallpox virus), which belongs to the genus Orthopoxvirus. The last naturally

    Smallpox

    Smallpox

    Smallpox

  • Smallpox Hospital
  • Building in Manhattan, New York

    The Smallpox Hospital, sometimes referred to as the Renwick Smallpox Hospital and later the Maternity and Charity Hospital Training School, was a hospital

    Smallpox Hospital

    Smallpox Hospital

    Smallpox_Hospital

  • 1775–1782 North American smallpox epidemic
  • Disease outbreak in North America

    North American smallpox epidemic. Estimates based on remnant settlements say at least 130,000 people were estimated to have died from smallpox in the epidemic

    1775–1782 North American smallpox epidemic

    1775–1782 North American smallpox epidemic

    1775–1782_North_American_smallpox_epidemic

  • 1837 Great Plains smallpox epidemic
  • Disease outbreak in the United States

    Between 1836 and 1840, smallpox became widespread across the Great Plains. The epidemic reached its height following the spring of 1837, when an American

    1837 Great Plains smallpox epidemic

    1837_Great_Plains_smallpox_epidemic

  • History of smallpox
  • The history of smallpox extends into pre-history. Genetic evidence suggests that the smallpox virus emerged 3,000 to 4,000 years ago. Prior to that, similar

    History of smallpox

    History_of_smallpox

  • San Juan Island
  • Island in the Salish Sea

    The 1862 Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic swept through the region, killing large numbers of indigenous people. Smallpox Bay, on the west side of San

    San Juan Island

    San Juan Island

    San_Juan_Island

  • 1721 Boston smallpox outbreak
  • Disease outbreak in Boston, USA

    would inspire further research for immunizing people from smallpox, placing the Massachusetts Bay Colony at the epicenter of the Colonies' first inoculation

    1721 Boston smallpox outbreak

    1721 Boston smallpox outbreak

    1721_Boston_smallpox_outbreak

  • Smith's Island, Bermuda
  • Isle in eastern Bermuda

    Island in autumn 1612. When the smallpox pandemic threatened the public health safety of Bermuda in the 1730s, Smallpox Bay (on the eastern side Smith's

    Smith's Island, Bermuda

    Smith's_Island,_Bermuda

  • Massachusetts smallpox epidemic
  • 1633 smallpox outbreak

    The Massachusetts smallpox epidemic or colonial epidemic was a smallpox outbreak that hit Massachusetts in 1633. Smallpox outbreaks were not confined

    Massachusetts smallpox epidemic

    Massachusetts_smallpox_epidemic

  • First Fleet
  • 11 British ships establishing an Australian penal colony

    introduced smallpox in the Aboriginal population". Other historians have disputed the idea that there was a deliberate release of smallpox virus and/or

    First Fleet

    First Fleet

    First_Fleet

  • List of epidemics and pandemics
  • January 6, 2024. Retrieved February 12, 2020. "1677–1678 — Smallpox Epidemic, Massachusetts Bay Colony, esp. Boston & vic. –750-1,000". usdeadlyevents. January

    List of epidemics and pandemics

    List_of_epidemics_and_pandemics

  • Cadboro Bay
  • Bay in British Columbia, Canada

    vessel to enter the bay, the Hudson's Bay Company schooner Cadboro. During the 1862 Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic, which started in Victoria, thousands

    Cadboro Bay

    Cadboro Bay

    Cadboro_Bay

  • Hudson's Bay point blanket
  • Wool blanket traded by Hudson's Bay Company

    Hudson's Bay point blankets are woollen blankets originally made for the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) in British North America, now Canada and the United

    Hudson's Bay point blanket

    Hudson's Bay point blanket

    Hudson's_Bay_point_blanket

  • Cotton Mather
  • Puritan clergyman (1663–1728)

    researched the variolation method of inoculation as a means of preventing smallpox contagion, which he learned about from an African-American slave whom he

    Cotton Mather

    Cotton Mather

    Cotton_Mather

  • Smallpox in Australia
  • Smallpox was a variable yet often fatal viral infectious disease. Even with good nursing, it regularly killed around 30% of recognised cases. Though widespread

    Smallpox in Australia

    Smallpox_in_Australia

  • Little Bay, New South Wales
  • Suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

    landmark once located at Little Bay. The Little Bay area was first used as a sanitation camp during Sydney's smallpox outbreak in 1881–82, to isolate

    Little Bay, New South Wales

    Little Bay, New South Wales

    Little_Bay,_New_South_Wales

  • Native American disease and epidemics
  • Old World plagues that decimated the indigenous population. Epidemics of smallpox, typhus, influenza, diphtheria, and measles swept the Americas subsequent

    Native American disease and epidemics

    Native American disease and epidemics

    Native_American_disease_and_epidemics

  • Roatán
  • Largest of the Bay Islands, Honduras

    diseases to which they had no immunity, such as smallpox and measles. Throughout the European colonial era, the Bay of Honduras attracted an array of individual

    Roatán

    Roatán

    Roatán

  • Onesimus (Bostonian)
  • African man enslaved in Boston

    an African (likely Akan) man who was instrumental in the mitigation of smallpox in Boston, Massachusetts. He introduced his enslaver, Puritan clergyman

    Onesimus (Bostonian)

    Onesimus_(Bostonian)

  • William Tomison
  • Scottish fur trader

    during the smallpox epidemic that affected the Cree from 1780 to 1781, providing assistance to First Nations people. Tomison served the Hudson's Bay Company

    William Tomison

    William Tomison

    William_Tomison

  • Inoculation
  • Method of inducing immunity against disease

    variolation (from the Latin word variola = smallpox), the predecessor to the smallpox vaccine. The smallpox vaccine, introduced by Edward Jenner in 1796

    Inoculation

    Inoculation

  • 1770s Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic
  • The first known smallpox epidemic to strike the native peoples of the coastal and interior Pacific Northwest arrived in the early 1770s, devastating large

    1770s Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic

    1770s_Pacific_Northwest_smallpox_epidemic

  • Fort Rupert
  • Place in British Columbia, Canada

    Fort Rupert with smallpox vaccine. Nonetheless, smallpox spread throughout northern Vancouver Island. Over the summer of 1862, smallpox reduced the Kwakwakaʼwakw

    Fort Rupert

    Fort Rupert

    Fort_Rupert

  • Jervis Bay
  • Oceanic bay in Jervis Bay Territory, New South Wales

    Shoalhaven displaced the Aboriginal inhabitants, who were moved to Wreck Bay in 1822. Smallpox and syphilis significantly reduced their population. A separate

    Jervis Bay

    Jervis Bay

    Jervis_Bay

  • 2026 Ebola epidemic
  • against non-essential travel to those affected areas, and prepared the Penny's Bay Community Isolation Facility on Lantau Island for possible isolation of suspected

    2026 Ebola epidemic

    2026 Ebola epidemic

    2026_Ebola_epidemic

  • Lekwungen
  • First Nation in Victoria, British Columbia

    Northwest smallpox epidemic, which killed about two-thirds of all native people in British Columbia, the Lekwungen were largely spared due to smallpox vaccines

    Lekwungen

    Lekwungen

    Lekwungen

  • 1789 Sydney smallpox outbreak
  • Disease outbreak in Australia

    1789, Sydney, Australia, experienced one of its most violent outbreaks of smallpox when the disease swept through Aboriginal and colonial Australians on the

    1789 Sydney smallpox outbreak

    1789 Sydney smallpox outbreak

    1789_Sydney_smallpox_outbreak

  • Indigenous peoples of the Americas
  • Some 90 percent of the native population near Massachusetts Bay Colony died of smallpox in an epidemic in 1617–1619. In 1633, in Fort Orange (New Netherland)

    Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    Indigenous_peoples_of_the_Americas

  • Canada
  • Country in North America

    2022.918227. PMC 9388791. PMID 35991555. True Peters, Stephanie (2005). Smallpox in the New World. Marshall Cavendish. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-7614-1637-1. Laidlaw

    Canada

    Canada

    Canada

  • Camps Bay
  • Suburb of Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa

    1657 were restricted to Camps Bay. By 1713 the number of Gringqhaique population had been reduced by measles and smallpox. All that was left of their settlement

    Camps Bay

    Camps Bay

    Camps_Bay

  • Pago Bay
  • Bay in Guam

    However, a smallpox epidemic in 1856 killed much of the village's population and the Spanish moved survivors to other villages, leaving the bay shoreline

    Pago Bay

    Pago Bay

    Pago_Bay

  • Arabanoo
  • Indigenous Australian captured by British colonists

    later launched vigilante attacks on the Aboriginal people near Botany Bay, and smallpox, which was probably brought to Sydney by the colonists, caused a devastating

    Arabanoo

    Arabanoo

  • Wangal
  • Ethnic group of indigenous Australians

    1789, just over a year after the establishment of the British settlement, smallpox broke out. There is speculation as to whether the disease was released

    Wangal

    Wangal

    Wangal

  • Ontario
  • Province of Canada

    Huron were devastated by European infectious diseases, such as measles and smallpox, to which they had no immunity. By 1700, the Iroquois had been driven out

    Ontario

    Ontario

    Ontario

  • John Thomas (American general)
  • American doctor and Continental Army general

    Continental Army. He died from smallpox during the retreat. Thomas was born in Marshfield, Province of Massachusetts Bay. As a young man he studied medicine

    John Thomas (American general)

    John Thomas (American general)

    John_Thomas_(American_general)

  • Discovery Island (British Columbia)
  • Island in British Columbia, Canada

    ship, HMS Chatham. During the early stages of the 1862 Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic, which started in Victoria, almost all Songhees self-quarantined

    Discovery Island (British Columbia)

    Discovery Island (British Columbia)

    Discovery_Island_(British_Columbia)

  • Morant Bay rebellion
  • 1865 rebellion in Morant Bay, Jamaica

    living conditions had worsened following crop damage by floods, cholera and smallpox epidemics, and a long drought. A few days before the march, when police

    Morant Bay rebellion

    Morant Bay rebellion

    Morant_Bay_rebellion

  • Battle of Gwynn's Island
  • Battle of the American Revolutionary War

    Dunmore's ships too long and smallpox broke out. After being driven away from Gwynn's Island, Dunmore's ships lingered in Chesapeake Bay before his vessels departed

    Battle of Gwynn's Island

    Battle_of_Gwynn's_Island

  • Ecological imperialism
  • Concept of foreign species aiding colonization by disrupting local ecology

    severely hurt the way of life of the native population. The first major smallpox outbreak among natives was between 1616 and 1619 in Massachusetts. Native

    Ecological imperialism

    Ecological_imperialism

  • Brazil
  • Country in South America

    from the original on 6 June 2009. Retrieved 29 October 2009. "Drought, Smallpox, and Emergence of Leishmania braziliensis in Northeastern Brazil" Archived

    Brazil

    Brazil

    Brazil

  • List of acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1906
  • 1906 Provisional Order for altering a Confirming Act.   Guisborough Joint Smallpox Hospital Order 1906 Provisional Order for forming a United District under

    List of acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1906

    List_of_acts_of_the_Parliament_of_the_United_Kingdom_from_1906

  • Bones Bay
  • Bay in British Columbia, Canada

    illegal expulsion of smallpox infected persons, all of whom were indigenous citizens from Fort Victoria during the introduced smallpox plague of 1862. The

    Bones Bay

    Bones_Bay

  • Obelisk Beach
  • Nude beach in New South Wales, Australia

    sites are found in the bushland all around Georges Head. The arrival of smallpox with European colonists meant that by 1795, the Aboriginal population on

    Obelisk Beach

    Obelisk Beach

    Obelisk_Beach

  • 44 West 77th Street
  • Apartment building in Manhattan, New York

    limestone trim, with elaborate arched doorway. The facade has three protruding bays of large, north-facing windows, intended in part to illuminate artists' studios

    44 West 77th Street

    44 West 77th Street

    44_West_77th_Street

  • Haiti
  • Country in the Caribbean

    (2004). Smallpox: The Fight to Eradicate a Global Scourge. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24220-3. "History of SmallpoxSmallpox Through

    Haiti

    Haiti

    Haiti

  • Rhesus macaque
  • Species of Old World monkey

    facilitated many scientific breakthroughs including vaccines for rabies, smallpox, polio, and antiretroviral medication to treat HIV/AIDS. A rhesus macaque

    Rhesus macaque

    Rhesus macaque

    Rhesus_macaque

  • Rupert's Land
  • Territory in British North America (1670–1870)

    broke down in the 1860s with the decline of the Hudson's Bay Company,[citation needed] smallpox epidemics and the arrival of American whisky traders on

    Rupert's Land

    Rupert's Land

    Rupert's_Land

  • Hudson Bay expedition
  • French raid on trading posts of the Hudson's Bay Company

    traded with the Hudson's Bay Company suffered severely due to both the company's inability to provision them and an ongoing smallpox epidemic that was decimating

    Hudson Bay expedition

    Hudson Bay expedition

    Hudson_Bay_expedition

  • Population history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas
  • exposure to Eurasian diseases such as influenza, pneumonic plagues, and smallpox; direct violence by settlers and their allies through war and forced removal;

    Population history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    Population history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    Population_history_of_the_Indigenous_peoples_of_the_Americas

  • Cuba
  • Country in the Caribbean

    two-thirds of those few indigenous individuals who had previously survived smallpox. On 18 May 1539, conquistador Hernando de Soto departed from Havana with

    Cuba

    Cuba

    Cuba

  • Eora
  • Aboriginal Australian nation of New South Wales

    Australia quickly devastated much of the population through epidemics of smallpox and other diseases. Descendants live on, though their traditions, languages

    Eora

    Eora

    Eora

  • List of purpose-built national capitals
  • Purpose-built capital cities

    Ayutthaya Ayutthaya Kingdom ( Thailand) 1350 Founded by Uthong after a smallpox outbreak in Lop Buri in 1350 Constantinople Roman Empire 330 Established

    List of purpose-built national capitals

    List_of_purpose-built_national_capitals

  • Semiahmoo people
  • Straits Salish people

    Sometime before 1850, the Snokomish living on Boundary Bay were almost entirely wiped out by a smallpox epidemic. The last Snokomish people were absorbed into

    Semiahmoo people

    Semiahmoo people

    Semiahmoo_people

  • Christian Cole (barrister)
  • Sierra Leonean barrister; first black graduate of Oxford University

    courts. He later went to Zanzibar to continue his career in law. He died of smallpox in 1885, at the age of 33. Pamela Roberts, founder and director of Black

    Christian Cole (barrister)

    Christian Cole (barrister)

    Christian_Cole_(barrister)

  • Spanish flu
  • 1918–1920 global influenza pandemic

    by steam shovel and bodies buried without coffins in many places. Bristol Bay, a region of Alaska populated by Indigenous people, suffered a death rate

    Spanish flu

    Spanish flu

    Spanish_flu

  • Colonialism
  • Control by distant groups

    natives in the 17th century. In 1618–1619, smallpox wiped out 90% of the Massachusetts Bay Native Americans. Smallpox epidemics in 1780–1782 and 1837–1838 brought

    Colonialism

    Colonialism

    Colonialism

  • Larry Brilliant
  • American physician and businessman

    World Health Organization from 1973–1976 helping to successfully eradicate smallpox. Brilliant, a technology patent holder, has been the CEO of public companies

    Larry Brilliant

    Larry Brilliant

    Larry_Brilliant

  • Sydney
  • Capital city of New South Wales, Australia

    the Cumberland Plain. By 1804, the colony was self-sufficient in food. A smallpox epidemic in April 1789 killed about half the region's Indigenous population

    Sydney

    Sydney

    Sydney

  • Grand Kankakee Marsh
  • Wetland in Indiana and Illinois, United States

    endemics newly introduced by European and American settlers. Diseases like smallpox decimated Indigenous communities, killing an estimated 90% of all Indigenous

    Grand Kankakee Marsh

    Grand Kankakee Marsh

    Grand_Kankakee_Marsh

  • List of fictional Native Americans
  • getting killed by her people (similar to Pocahontas) but later died of smallpox. [citation needed] Red Cloud The Navajo shaman. [citation needed] Tex Willer

    List of fictional Native Americans

    List_of_fictional_Native_Americans

  • Twofold Bay
  • Bay in New South Wales, Australia

    Calle Calle Bay; while the southern bight is known as Nullica Bay, derived from Nalluccer, the original Aboriginal name for Twofold Bay. The bay is also known

    Twofold Bay

    Twofold Bay

    Twofold_Bay

  • List of Philippine mythological figures
  • of the outrigger which transports the dead to Kiyabusan Fuku: deity of smallpox Lumalayag: warriors who challenge and fight the Salakap Tandayag: a deity

    List of Philippine mythological figures

    List of Philippine mythological figures

    List_of_Philippine_mythological_figures

  • Human history
  • Records of Earth's people

    scientific and technological developments such as the worldwide eradication of smallpox, the Green Revolution in agriculture, the discovery of plate tectonics

    Human history

    Human_history

  • 2023 Hawaii wildfires
  • Natural disasters in the USA

    medical instruments he used to vaccinate much of Maui's population against smallpox in the 1800s, seashell collections, and the family's furniture and rocking

    2023 Hawaii wildfires

    2023 Hawaii wildfires

    2023_Hawaii_wildfires

  • Joseph Stalin
  • Leader of the Soviet Union from 1924 to 1953

    Church School, where he excelled. Stalin faced health problems: an 1884 smallpox infection left him with facial scars, and at age 12, he was seriously injured

    Joseph Stalin

    Joseph Stalin

    Joseph_Stalin

  • Thomas Babington Macaulay (Nigeria)
  • Yoruba priest and educator

    upon their own soil. Macaulay died on his birthday (17 January 1878) from smallpox in Lagos and was buried at Ajele Cemetery. Babington Macaulay Junior Seminary

    Thomas Babington Macaulay (Nigeria)

    Thomas_Babington_Macaulay_(Nigeria)

  • Timeline of Oxford
  • take the Oath of Supremacy. September: Cholera outbreak combined with smallpox. Corporation waterworks established at South Hinksey. 1855 – University

    Timeline of Oxford

    Timeline of Oxford

    Timeline_of_Oxford

  • Tambourine Bay
  • Bight in Australia

    Tambourine Bay is a bay located in between the suburbs of Riverview and Longueville in the Lower North Shore of Sydney, NSW, Australia. The bay and its adjoining

    Tambourine Bay

    Tambourine_Bay

  • Virginia
  • U.S. state

    Three-fourths of the native population in Virginia, however, died from smallpox and other Old World diseases during that century, disrupting their oral

    Virginia

    Virginia

    Virginia

  • Fort Simpson (Columbia Department)
  • While authorities at other Hudson's Bay Company forts, as well as at nearby Metlakatla, administered smallpox vaccine and tried to limit the epidemic

    Fort Simpson (Columbia Department)

    Fort_Simpson_(Columbia_Department)

  • Shíshálh Nation
  • First Nation in British Columbia, Canada

    the shíshálh people experienced numerous changes. Disease (especially smallpox) became rampant, and resulted in a severe decrease of the shíshálh population

    Shíshálh Nation

    Shíshálh Nation

    Shíshálh_Nation

  • 2026 deaths in the United States
  • Fobbs passes away William Foege, medical pioneer who helped stamp out smallpox, has died William M. Keys, LtGen USMC, Ret Michael Parenti Man killed in

    2026 deaths in the United States

    2026_deaths_in_the_United_States

  • History of Sydney
  • they had little resistance to many introduced diseases. An outbreak of smallpox in April 1789 killed about half the Aboriginal population of the Sydney

    History of Sydney

    History of Sydney

    History_of_Sydney

  • Tomar
  • Town and municipality in Portugal

    Tomar (c. 635 – c. 653), Christian martyr Angela Tamagnini (1770–1827), smallpox vaccination pioneer, resisted the French invasion during the Napoleonic

    Tomar

    Tomar

    Tomar

  • Battle of Guantánamo Bay
  • Part of the Spanish–American War in 1898

    The Battle of Guantánamo Bay was fought from June 6 to June 14, 1898, during the Spanish–American War, when American and Cuban forces seized the strategically

    Battle of Guantánamo Bay

    Battle of Guantánamo Bay

    Battle_of_Guantánamo_Bay

  • History of Australia
  • they had little resistance to many introduced diseases. An outbreak of smallpox in April 1789 killed about half the Aboriginal population of the Sydney

    History of Australia

    History of Australia

    History_of_Australia

  • Langebaan
  • Place in Western Cape, South Africa

    have a history of their own, including battles for ownership, use as smallpox quarantine hospitals, exploits for guano, sealing centres and other activities

    Langebaan

    Langebaan

    Langebaan

  • Australian labour law
  • Rights and duties of workers, unions and employers in Australia

    but contact with European settlers killed up to 80% of people through smallpox and other diseases. In the Australian frontier wars over the next century

    Australian labour law

    Australian labour law

    Australian_labour_law

  • George William Gordon
  • Jamaican patriot and businessman

    rural economy, and the aftermath of crippling epidemics of cholera and smallpox. Gordon criticised Eyre's draconian punishments such as flogging and the

    George William Gordon

    George William Gordon

    George_William_Gordon

  • Diplomacy of the American Civil War
  • time found conditions much worse than expected, and after suffering from smallpox and yellow fever many returned to the United States. Following the departure

    Diplomacy of the American Civil War

    Diplomacy of the American Civil War

    Diplomacy_of_the_American_Civil_War

  • Kodiak Island
  • Island off the coast of Alaska, United States

    young, old, and sick as they had done traditionally. In 1837–1839, a smallpox epidemic swept through all the Russian America territory and destroyed

    Kodiak Island

    Kodiak Island

    Kodiak_Island

  • John H. Quick
  • United States Marine (1870–1922)

    want it. He could have it and welcome. If the young sergeant had had the smallpox, the cholera, and the yellow fever, we could not have slid out with more

    John H. Quick

    John H. Quick

    John_H._Quick

  • Powhatan
  • Indigenous Algonquian tribes from Virginia, U.S.

    not just by warfare but from infectious diseases, such as measles and smallpox, newly introduced to North America by Europeans. The Native Americans did

    Powhatan

    Powhatan

    Powhatan

  • Indigenous Australians
  • Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islander peoples

    epidemics of European diseases such as measles, smallpox and tuberculosis. In the 19th century, smallpox was the principal cause of Aboriginal deaths, and

    Indigenous Australians

    Indigenous_Australians

  • Islam
  • Abrahamic monotheistic religion

    and Europe for centuries. Rhazes was the first to identify the diseases smallpox and measles. Public hospitals of the time issued the first medical diplomas

    Islam

    Islam

    Islam

  • History of Zakynthos
  • History of the Greek island

    serious outbreaks of the plague in 1617, 1646, 1692 and 1728 and also smallpox in 1713, 1748 and 1778. One of the most famous victims of the 1728 plague

    History of Zakynthos

    History of Zakynthos

    History_of_Zakynthos

  • Plymouth Colony
  • English colonial venture in America (1620–1691)

    arrival of the Mayflower. The epidemic has traditionally been thought to be smallpox, but a recent analysis suggests it was a lesser-known disease called leptospirosis

    Plymouth Colony

    Plymouth Colony

    Plymouth_Colony

  • Ranjit Singh
  • Sikh Maharaja, 1801–1839

    Maha Singh, the leader of the Sukerchakia Misl, Ranjit Singh survived smallpox in infancy but lost sight in his left eye. At the age of ten, he fought

    Ranjit Singh

    Ranjit Singh

    Ranjit_Singh

  • Hoodoo (spirituality)
  • Spiritual practices, traditions and beliefs

    For example, African traditional medicine proved beneficial during a smallpox outbreak in the colony of Boston, Massachusetts. An enslaved African named

    Hoodoo (spirituality)

    Hoodoo (spirituality)

    Hoodoo_(spirituality)

  • Skeena River
  • River in British Columbia, Canada

    to their homelands, spreading smallpox throughout the Pacific Northwest coast. Groups of Tsimshian thus brought smallpox from Victoria to the Fort Simpson

    Skeena River

    Skeena River

    Skeena_River

  • Victoria, British Columbia
  • Capital city of British Columbia, Canada

    1862. In 1862, Victoria was the epicentre of the 1862 Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic which devastated First Nations, killing about two-thirds of all

    Victoria, British Columbia

    Victoria, British Columbia

    Victoria,_British_Columbia

  • Native American genocide in the United States
  • Ethnic cleansing in the United States

    including Eurasian diseases like influenza, pneumonic plagues, cholera, and smallpox. Additionally, conflicts, massacres, forced removal, enslavement, imprisonment

    Native American genocide in the United States

    Native American genocide in the United States

    Native_American_genocide_in_the_United_States

  • Haida people
  • Indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest Coast

    American trader in 1860.[excessive citations] The 1862 Pacific Northwest smallpox epidemic began on March 26 when a steamship called Brother Jonathan arrived

    Haida people

    Haida people

    Haida_people

  • Timeline of historic inventions
  • 1796: Edward Jenner invented the vaccine and inoculates an individual for smallpox 1799: The first paper machine is invented by Louis-Nicolas Robert 1800:

    Timeline of historic inventions

    Timeline_of_historic_inventions

  • Massachusetts
  • U.S. state

    most likely smallpox killed approximately 90% of the Massachusetts Bay Native Americans. The first English colonists in Massachusetts Bay Colony landed

    Massachusetts

    Massachusetts

    Massachusetts

  • Vaccine Revolt
  • 1904 week of civil disorder in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

    Brazil. Its immediate pretext was a law that made vaccination against smallpox compulsory, but it is also associated with deeper causes, such as the urban

    Vaccine Revolt

    Vaccine Revolt

    Vaccine_Revolt

  • Wendat people
  • Iroquoian-speaking people of the Great Lakes

    Wendat were devastated by Eurasian infectious diseases, such as measles and smallpox. The Indigenous peoples of North America had no acquired immunity to these

    Wendat people

    Wendat_people

  • 2019
  • Calendar year

    Russia sets off a fire in a bioweapons plant that houses viruses including smallpox, ebola and anthrax. September 17 – Interest rates on repurchase agreements

    2019

    2019

    2019

AI & ChatGPT searchs for online references containing SMALLPOX BAY

SMALLPOX BAY

AI search references containing SMALLPOX BAY

SMALLPOX BAY

  • Bays
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bays

    English : patronymic from Bay.

    Bays

  • Shitala
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Shitala

    Goddess of smallpox.

    Shitala

  • Bayard
  • Boy/Male

    American, Anglo, British, Christian, English, French, German, Teutonic

    Bayard

    Russet-haired; Red-brown Hair; Reddish Brown; Bright Bay Color; Auburn Haired

    Bayard

  • Bay
  • Surname or Lastname

    English, French, and Dutch

    Bay

    English, French, and Dutch : nickname for someone with chestnut or auburn hair, from Middle English, Old French bay, bai, Middle Dutch bay ‘reddish brown’ (Latin badius, used originally of horses).English : from the Middle English personal name Baye, Old English Bēaga (masculine) or Bēage (feminine).Scottish : reduced form of McBeth.German : from the Germanic personal name Baio.The name is also found in Denmark and Norway, where it may be a short form of German Bayer or from baygh, originally a loan word from French denoting a type of fabric.

    Bay

  • Hariti
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Hariti

    Goddess of smallpox.

    Hariti

  • Baylis
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Baylis

    English : variant of Bayliss.

    Baylis

  • Bayman
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (mainly Lancashire)

    Bayman

    English (mainly Lancashire) : unexplained; perhaps ‘servant of Bay’.Altered spelling of German Beumann or Bäumann, variants of Baumann.

    Bayman

  • Bayse
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (East Midlands)

    Bayse

    English (East Midlands) : variant of Bayes.

    Bayse

  • Boyer
  • Surname or Lastname

    Altered spelling of German Bayer or Beyer.German

    Boyer

    Altered spelling of German Bayer or Beyer.German : habitational name for someone from Boye (near Celle-Hannover).English : variant of Bowyer.Danish : habitational name from a place so named. The surname is also found in Norway and Sweden, probably from the same source.

    Boyer

  • Bayes
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bayes

    English : patronymic from the Middle English personal name Baye (see Bay).

    Bayes

  • Baye
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Dutch

    Baye

    English and Dutch : variant spelling of Bay.

    Baye

  • Madden
  • Boy/Male

    Irish

    Madden

    Smalldog Milos.

    Madden

  • Baylen
  • Boy/Male

    American, British, English, French

    Baylen

    Auburn Haired; Variant of Bayard

    Baylen

  • Bayard
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and French

    Bayard

    English and French : nickname for a reckless person, from Middle English, Old French baiard, baiart ‘foolhardy’ (the name—a derivative of baie ‘reddish brown’—of the magnificent but reckless horse given to Renaud by Charlemagne, according to medieval romances).English and French : metonymic occupational name for a carrier, from Middle English, Old French baiard, baiart ‘hand barrow’, ‘open cart’.English and French : A Huguenot family of this name migrated from France to Antwerp in the 16th century. In 1647 Anna Bayard, widow of Samuel Bayard, and her three young children accompanied her brother Peter Stuyvesant to New Amsterdam aboard the Princess. Her sons Petrus and Nicolas Bayard, both born in Alphen, Netherlands, had many prominent descendants in North America. Peter Stuyvesant’s wife Judith was a Bayard.

    Bayard

  • BAYARD
  • Male

    French

    BAYARD

    Old French name derived from the word baie, BAYARD means "reddish brown" or "bright bay color." In medieval romances, this was the name of a magic horse from the legends of the chansons de geste ("Songs of Heroic Deeds") which was given to Renaud by Charlemagne. It belonged to the four sons of Aymon, and had the ability to grow larger or smaller as one or more riders mounted it. According to tradition, one of its foot-prints may still be seen in the forest of Soignes, and another on a rock near Dinant.

    BAYARD

  • Bayliss
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bayliss

    English : occupational name for an officer of a court of justice, whose duties included serving writs, distraining goods, and (formerly) arresting people. In England formerly it was also a status name for the chief officer of a hundred (administrative subdivision of a county). The derivation is from Middle English, Old French bailis, from Late Latin baiulivus (adjective), ‘pertaining to an attendant or porter’ (see Bailey).Thomas Baylies, a prominent Quaker, came to Boston from London in 1737.

    Bayliss

  • Baylor
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Baylor

    English : variant spelling of Bailor.Respelling of German Bailer or Bayler (see Beiler).

    Baylor

  • Bayless
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bayless

    English : variant spelling of Bayliss.

    Bayless

  • Bayliff
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bayliff

    English : variant of Bailiff. See also Bayliss.

    Bayliff

  • BAYARDO
  • Male

    Spanish

    BAYARDO

    Variant spelling of Spanish Bajardo, BAYARDO means "bay color." 

    BAYARDO

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Online names & meanings

  • Pretvan
  • Boy/Male

    Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Telugu

    Pretvan

    Moving Along

  • Lenart
  • Boy/Male

    Australian, Swedish

    Lenart

    Lion; Brave; Hardy

  • Narpathi
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Narpathi

    King

  • Kanan
  • Girl/Female

    Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Jain, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Oriya, Punjabi, Sikh, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu

    Kanan

    Garden; Dark Forest

  • Sharama
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Sharama

    Dog of dawn.

  • Abhyank
  • Boy/Male

    Indian

    Abhyank

    Name of God

  • Maralah
  • Girl/Female

    Biblical Native American

    Maralah

    Sleep, a sacrifice of myrrh, ascension.

  • Kirkby
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Kirkby

    English : variant of Kirby.

  • Khyati
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Punjabi, Sikh

    Khyati

    Fame

  • Himanthsai
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Telugu

    Himanthsai

    Avatar of Sai; Good

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Other words and meanings similar to

SMALLPOX BAY

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing SMALLPOX BAY

SMALLPOX BAY

  • Variola
  • n.

    The smallpox.

  • Efflorescence
  • n.

    A redness of the skin; eruption, as in rash, measles, smallpox, scarlatina, etc.

  • Pockmarked
  • a.

    Marked by smallpox; pitted.

  • Pitted
  • a.

    Marked with little pits, as in smallpox. See Pit, v. t., 2.

  • Communication
  • n.

    The act or fact of communicating; as, communication of smallpox; communication of a secret.

  • Confluent
  • a.

    Characterized by having the pustules, etc., run together or unite, so as to cover the surface; as, confluent smallpox.

  • Pockmark
  • n.

    A mark or pit made by smallpox.

  • Pit
  • n.

    The indentation or mark left by a pustule, as in smallpox.

  • Variolous
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to the smallpox; having pits, or sunken impressions, like those of the smallpox; variolar; variolic.

  • Variolation
  • n.

    Inoculation with smallpox.

  • Varioloid
  • a.

    The smallpox as modified by previous inoculation or vaccination.

  • Umbilicated
  • a.

    Depressed in the middle, like a navel, as a flower, fruit, or leaf; navel-shaped; having an umbilicus; as, an umbilicated smallpox vesicle.

  • Varioloid
  • a.

    Resembling smallpox; pertaining to the disease called varioloid.

  • Pocky
  • superl.

    Full of pocks; affected with smallpox or other eruptive disease.

  • Smallpox
  • n.

    A contagious, constitutional, febrile disease characterized by a peculiar eruption; variola. The cutaneous eruption is at first a collection of papules which become vesicles (first flat, subsequently umbilicated) and then pustules, and finally thick crusts which slough after a certain time, often leaving a pit, or scar.

  • Vaccination
  • n.

    The act, art, or practice of vaccinating, or inoculating with the cowpox, in order to prevent or mitigate an attack of smallpox. Cf. Inoculation.

  • Antivariolous
  • a.

    Preventing the contagion of smallpox.

  • Pit
  • v. t.

    To mark with little hollows, as by various pustules; as, a face pitted by smallpox.

  • Pock-broken
  • a.

    Broken out, or marked, with smallpox; pock-fretten.

  • Fretten
  • a.

    Rubbed; marked; as, pock-fretten, marked with the smallpox.