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1832 U.S. vaccinates Native peoples on the frontier against smallpox Congress passes the Indian Vaccination Act and appropriates $12,000 to hire physicians to vaccinate Native ... |
1833 Whooping cough crosses the Great Plains Whooping cough spreads across the U.S., killing babies and children, for whom the infection is particularly ... |
1834 Priest gains Tlingit support by offering vaccinations The Russian Orthodox priest, Father Veniaminov, moves from the Aleutians to Sitka. He is at first unpopular ... |
1835 Russian-American Company orders Native vaccinations To protect Russians from smallpox transmission from Native peoples, the Russian-American Company, which ... |
1847 Wagon trains carry measles; Cayuse blame missionary for withholding care Wagon trains bring measles over the Oregon Trail to Waiilatpu, near what is now known as Walla Walla, ... |
1848 Successive epidemics spread across U.S., Alaska, Hawai‘i In September, a series of deadly epidemics, including measles, whooping cough, and influenza, sweeps ... |
1854 ‘Red men will be numbered with the dead,’ physicians state The American physicians Josiah Nott and George Gliddon theorize in their book Types of Mankind that ... |
1862 Priests vaccinate thousands on Northwest Coast Catholic missionaries from the Oblate of Mary Immaculate give smallpox vaccinations to thousands of ... |
1879 U.S. assigns health care at boarding schools The Office of Indian Affairs, recognizing that epidemics are decimating boarding school student populations, ... |
1887 Tuberculosis is a leading cause of death in Indian Country A U.S. study of tuberculosis deaths among Indians on reservations in 13 states finds that the rate of ... |