whooping-cough,670,672,relation of same to measles,675,scarlatina 1835-39,725,milk scarlatina,734note,“bowel-hive,”758,dysentery of 1827-28,786,of 1836,789,cholera of 1832,808,of 1848-9,836,of 1853-4,855,of 1866,859Gloucester, Duke of, dies of smallpox,438Gloucester, agues in 1727-29,74Goodsir, John, enteric fever at Anstruther,199Goole, infantile diarrhoea,762,765noteGrainger, James, anomalous fever in 1753,123Grant, William, pestilential fever in London,137,influenza of 1775,359,fever and sore-throat,707Graunt, John, exactness of the early bills of mortality,653noteGraves, Robert J., typhus fatal to the well-to-do,102,fever in Galway,270,jaundice in relapsing fever,272,spotted typhus a new type,277,typhus begins like a cold,278note,failure of blooding in influenza,282,mild and fatal scarlatina,722,724,type of scarlatina not affected by treatment,725,writings on cholera,831noteGray, Edward, collective inquiry on influenza of 1782,363,365Greenock, high typhus death-rates,209,cholera of 1832,813Gregory, George, compares London smallpox of 1825 with great 18th cent. epidemics,593-5,advocates re-vaccination,612Gregory, James, follows course of influenza in 1775,361Griffin, Daniel, infantile mortality in Limerick,602Grimsby, cholera in 1893,860Grimshaw, T. W., fever and rainfall in Dublin,298,relation of whooping-cough to measles,676noteGrippe, la,339noteGuide, Philip, on Talbor,319Guilford, Lord, his fever treated by bark,321Gull, Sir William W., report on cholera,846noteHaeser, Heinrich, identities of 18th cent. throat-distempers,691noteHague, The, ages in 18th cent. smallpox,623Hales, Stephen, ventilation of Newgate,94,ventilation of ships,119Halifax, semi-rural industries of,145,smallpox at in 1681,458,inoculation at,483Hamilton, Sir David, case of fever in London in 1709,55,factitious miliary fever,128,fever and sore-throat in 1704,704noteHamilton, dysentery in 1801,785,cholera of 1848-9,838Hampstead, agues in 1781,367,scarlatina in 1786,713Hampton, U. S., throat-distemper in 18th cent.,690Harris, Walter, influenza of 1688,336,mildness of smallpox in infants,441,reference to inoculation in 1721,467,whooping-cough,667,summer diarrhoea fatal to London infants,749,763Harty, William, Irish epidemic of 1817-19,264,affinities of dysentery,782,cholera in Dublin prisons,816Hastings, smallpox in 1731,521Haverfordwest, buying the smallpox,471,diphtheria in 1849,738noteHaviland, Alfred, the Hippocratic “constitutions,”10note,village epidemic of ague in 1858,393Hawkins, Bisset, cavils at Watt,658Hawkins, Caesar, inoculator,504,515Haygarth, John, typhus in Chester,41,143,miliary fever,130,influenza of 1803,376,procuring the smallpox,477,census of Chester after smallpox in 1774,544note,infantile deaths at Chester,553-4,letter on Jenner’s cowpox project in 1794,559Heberden, William, junior, supposed decrease of dysentery,747,774Heberden, William, senior, smallpox least dangerous to infants,442,a failure of inoculation,498,measles in 1753,644,scarlatina and angina,712noteHecker, J. F. C., identity of throat-epidemics,691note,704noteHecquet, Ph., reasons against inoculation,479noteHelmont, J. B. van, ridiculed by Barker,450noteHenry, Thomas, smallpox in different parts of Manchester,556noteHertford, smallpox in 1722,519Hewett, Cornwallis, cases of enteric fever,185Heysham, John, Carlisle typhus,147,smallpox,538,555,570,measles,646,scarlatina,712,723Hillary, William, Ripon fevers,72-3,copious bloodings,74note,nervous fever in Barbados,127,influenza in Barbados,352,412,volcanic waves at Bridgetown,411,smallpox mild there,548Hippocrates, epidemic constitutions,9Hirsch, August, identity of 18th cent. throat-distempers,691note,737note,history of infantile diarrhoea,758,degrees of epidemic dysentery,774Holland, Sir Henry, advises re-vaccination,613,“hypothesis of insect life” in cholera,827noteHoly Island, ship typhus,109Hongkong fever, resembles influenza,423noteHorsesattacked by influenza in 1658,313,in 1688,337,in 1727-29,345,in 1732,348,in 1737,348,in 1758,353,in 1743 and 1750,354,in 1760,355,in 1775,361,in 1783,371note,in 1788,372Howard, John, effects of the window-tax,88,discoveries of gaol-fever,95,smallpox in three gaols,544Hull, infantile diarrhoea,762,765note,cholera of 1832,823,of 1849,845,of 1854,851Hume, David, influence of climate etc.,224Hunter, John, M.D., typhus in London,15,134,138Hutchinson, James, change in fevers since 17th cent.,3Hutchinson, Jonathan, vaccinal syphilis,562noteHuxham, John, Plymouth fevers 1727-29,73-4,worm fever in 1734,75,typhus,76-77,ship fever,78,gaol fever at Launceston in 1742,93,influenza in 1729,345,horse-cold in 1727,345,influenza of 1733,347,influenza and horse-cold of 1737,348-9,influenza of 1743,351,smallpox of 1724-25,520,smallpox of 1751,529,malignant measles 1749,656,anginose fever of 1734,684,epidemic sore-throat of 1751,695,699Iceland, dust clouds from volcanic action,414India, cholera before 1817,860,creation of the endemic area,861Industrial Revolution, the,145Infantile Remittent Fever,5-8Influenza, historically mixed with epidemic ague,300,probable etymology of,304,names of before 1743,305,retrospect of influenzas to 1659,306-313,influenza of 1675,326,of 1679,328,of 1688,335,of 1693,337,of 1712,339,of 1729,343,probable in 1728,346,of 1733,346,of 1737,348,of 1743,349,of 1758,353,of 1759 in Peru,354,of 1762,356,of 1767,358,of 1775,359,of 1782,362,of 1788,370,of 1803,374,of 1831,379,of 1833,380,of 1837,383,of 1847-48,389,minor epidemics,391,of 1889-94,393,antiquity and sameness of,398,views of Willis and Sydenham,399,miasmatic hypothesis of Boyle,399-402,theory of Arbuthnot,402,theory of Noah Webster,405,a phenomenal cause needed,407,relation to epidemic agues,409,the epidemic of 1761 at Barbados and the earthquake,409,the earthquake of Lisbon and influenzas,411,earthquakes and the influenza of 1782,413,miasmatic sickness following earthquakes in Jamaica,415,in Amboina,418note,and in Sicily,419,possible sources of miasmata of influenza in 1693,420,epidemic of 1688 and the earthquake of Lima,421,possible sources of S. American epidemic in 1720, direction in which the true theory lies,425,outbreaks at sea,425-431,strangers’ colds,431-433.alsoHorses.Inoculationof smallpox, a Greek practice,463,begun in London,467,popular origins of,471,Voltaire’s legend of Circassian,472note,probably grew out of transplantation of disease,474,religious symbolism of inoculation,475,etymology of,476,not an antidote,477,controversy on in England,477,reality of as practised by Nettleton,482,at Boston, New England,485,cases of failure,487,cases of death from,489,revival of in 1741,489,at Charleston in 1738,490,as practised by Frewen,492,by Kirkpatrick,493,the blister method of,494,Gatti’s practice in,495,Sutton’s practice in,498,opposition to Sutton’s method of,499,Watson’s experiment in,500,Mudge’s experiment in,501,tests of its validity,502,extent of in England in 18th cent.,504-9,in Scotland,509,value of,511,at Blandford,513,at the Foundling Hospital,514,known failures of,515,testimonies to value of,516,advocates of in 19th cent.,586,Lipscomb’s poem on,587,preference of populace for,589,practised by Walker as vaccination,590,extent of,590-2,made penal,606,history of the doctrine that it was a nuisance,607-10,did not contain the principle of re-vaccination,610Intermittent Fevers, Sydenham’s view of,11,in Ireland after the relapsing fever of 1826,273,and of 1847-9,297.alsoAgue.Inverness, typhus at,110,cholera of 1832,814,of 1849,838Ipswich, ship typhus at,110,scarlatina in 1771,708Jamaica, sickness after earthquake,416Jenner, Edward, relapsing fever in his house,156,inoculates with crude matter,502,collects failures of inoculation,515,inoculates with swinepox,558,proposes to inoculate with cowpox,558,indicates ulcerous characters of cowpox,560,his opinion on origin of smallpox and cowpox,562,calls cowpoxvariolae vaccinae,563,tests the virtue of cowpox,565,makes interest with the great,566,demands prohibition of inoculation,609,opposes Watt’s doctrine of measles,657Jenner, J. C., epidemic ague in 1784,369,general inoculation,509,why smallpox malignant,550Jenner, Sir William, diagnosis of continued fevers,4,183,diphtheria,739note,rickets a diathesis,767Jesty, Benjamin, inoculates with cowpox,558Johnstone, James, Kidderminster fevers 1752-56,124,sequelae of measles,660note,sore-throat and fever,702,704,the scarlet eruption,710Johnstone, James, junior, dies of gaol fever,153,writes on the scarlatina of 1778,710Jolly rant, name of influenza in 1675,327note,328Jones, John, fevers of the Greeks not in our climate,301,agues of 1558,307Jones, John, dysentery in Wales,777Jurin, James, arguments for inoculation,479,his authority,480,biographical sketch of,481noteKanturk, incidents at in famine of 1818,265Katharine, Queen of Charles II., her fever in 1663,13Kell, John Butler, cholera at Sunderland 1831,798Kellwaye, Simon, measles and smallpox,633Kelso, agues in 18th cent.,369,cholera in 1848-9,838Kendal, vaccination 1819-21,584Kennedy, Henry, type of Dublin fever in 1847,289,in 1862,298Kennedy, Peter, inoculation at Constantinople,464,procuring smallpox in Scotland,471Kerr, George, fever in Aberdeen,176Kidderminster, fevers in 1727-29,124note,in 1751-56,124,sequelae of measles,660,sore-throat and fever in 1748,701,704,in 1778,710Kilgour, Alexander, typhus one of the exanthemata,189,ratio of spotted cases,193Kilkenny, sickness in 1846,282Kilmarnock, 18th cent. smallpox,526,cholera of 1832,814,of 1849,838Kiltearn, paupers in 1697,51note,smallpox in 18th cent.,541Kingsley, Charles, cholera of 1854,851noteKink, old name of whooping-cough,666Kirkmaiden, smallpox and fever in 18th cent.,528Kirkpatrick, or Kilpatrick, J., inoculates at Charleston,90,in London,491,493Kite, Charles, second inoculations,503,failures of inoculation,515La Condamine, M. de, case of Timoni’s daughter,488note,advocates inoculation,494,estimates saving of life by same,516La Motraye, M. de, procuring smallpox in Circassia,472Lamport, John, fever in Hampshire 1680,21,his success in smallpox,453Lamprey, Jones, types of famine sickness in Skull 1846,287,288Lancaster, typhus in 1782,151Langton, William, opposes formal inoculation,500Lansdowne, Marquis of, inoculation and vaccination,606,607Launceston, gaol typhus,93,97,diphtheria,740Laurie, J. Adair, statistics of Glasgow cholera hospital in 1832,811Laycock, Thomas, influenza at York,389noteLe Cat, Claude Nicolas, the Rouen fever of 1753,121Leeds, typhus in 18th cent.,146,in 1802,160,statistics of fever hospital,164,fever in 1817,171,notification at in 1804,180note,typhus in 1847,207note,influenza in 1675,327,smallpox in 1689-99,458,general inoculations,510,smallpox in 1781,538,555,cholera nostras in 1825,773,dysentery in 1849,791,842,cholera in 1849,847Leith, cholera of 1832,814,of 1848,836Lettsom, John Coakley, gaol fever,97,London fevers in 1773,135,inoculation of infants,507,general inoculation at Ware,511London smallpox more than in the Bills,534,smallpox in 1808,570,inoculation not contagious,608,saving of life in typhus,628,scarlatina in 1793,718Levett, Robert, amateur in medicine,134Levison, George, scarlatina in 1777,708Leyburn, fever in 1813,167Limerick, famine of 1741,242,statistics of fever hospital,258,pauperism of 1836,275,statistics of fever,276,of infantile mortality,602,cholera of 1832,818,of 1849,839Lind, James, desires history of British fevers,1,ventilation of gaols,95,ship fever,111,Sutton’s pipes,119,