Full description
This material provides data associated a table and map showing smallpox cases and vaccination sites reported by John Mair, Assistant Surgeon of the 39th Regiment, and by other sources, and included in the article ‘Smallpox on the limits of location: the politics of diagnosis in New South Wales, 1830-34’ accepted for publication in Australian Historical Studies in August 2025. This material consists of two original files in a variety of formats: + Table1_References – an extended version of table 1 in the article including two additional tables: metadata: metadata (or field descriptions) describing each field in Table1_References; sources: a table with full reference details for the references used for each point. + Figure1_LargeVersion – a larger version of Figure 1 in the related article. Table1_References is supplied in the following formats: csv, xlsx and gpkg (geopackage, a geospatial variant of Sqlite), and kml. Figure1_LargeVersion is supplied as a JPG file. It has as a basemap, the following map, P.L. Bemi, Map of the County of Bathurst and Parts of the Adjacent Counties (Sydney, 1829), Z/M4 812.2gbbd/1829/1, State Library of New South Wales. https://collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/74VM0NGRO4DA Figure annotations showing placenames, named pastoral estates and smallpox cases recorded in 1831, as numbered in Table1_References. Article abstract In the early 1830s a smallpox epidemic impacted First Nations communities across much of southeastern Australia. Colonial medical officers debated the diagnosis of this outbreak, arguing whether it was smallpox or chickenpox. This article examines this debate in detail, reading archival sources in their broader context. Historical-Geographical Information Systems (H-GIS) is used to map where smallpox was reported, revealing presences and absences in the archival record. The 1830s smallpox/chickenpox debate was highly political, for the outbreak occurred in a contested geography, where martial law had been declared just seven years earlier. Pastoralists were growing rich from sheep and cattle grazing upon recently stolen land. To argue for a smallpox diagnosis, was to also argue for the implementation of state-sponsored vaccination (as seen in other contemporary colonial settings). A chickenpox diagnosis, meanwhile, excused settler inaction, maintained the pastoralists dominance, and enabled many to largely ignore the epidemic while it was happening.Issued: 2025-08-12
Data time period: 1790 to 1834-03
Data time period:
Early nineteenth century
Spatial Coverage And Location
text: New South Wales, Australia
Subjects
Australian History |
Culture and Society |
Digital History |
Expanding Knowledge |
Expanding Knowledge |
Expanding Knowledge in History, Heritage and Archaeology |
Expanding Knowledge in the Health Sciences |
History, Heritage and Archaeology |
Historical Geographic Information Systems |
Historical Studies |
Understanding Australia's Past |
Understanding Past Societies |
chickenpox |
colonial medicine |
frontier governance |
pastoralism |
smallpox |
vaccination |
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Identifiers
- DOI : 10.6084/M9.FIGSHARE.29881058
- Handle : 1959.4/105939
