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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 Mexico denies return of mission lands to Chumash In California, the Mexican government frees the Chumash, who had been enslaved by the Spanish in California ... |
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 ... |
1836 Hawaiian monarchs order foreigners screened for smallpox Kuhina Nui Elizabeth Kaho‘anoku Kina‘u (a wife of the late Kamehameha II) takes the first documented ... |
1836–39 Unangan (Aleut) population declines further Smallpox, measles, chicken pox, and whooping cough epidemics reduce the Unangan (Aleut) population, which ... |
1836–40 Smallpox, whooping cough strike the Great Plains A smallpox epidemic spreads through Native communities in the West, killing 10,000 people in the Northern ... |
1837–38 Smallpox decimates tribes; survivors join together A smallpox epidemic destroys the Numakiki (Mandan) Indians in North Dakota. Although they experienced ... |
1863 Leprosy spreads The missionary physician Dwight D. Baldwin of Lahaina on Maui reports that 54 people in his church are ... |