The London Plague of 1636.
The London plague of 1636 was one of the second degree, for the capital, and was otherwise peculiar as being rather later in the autumnal season than usual. The following table of the weekly mortalities shows how it increased, reached a height, and declined.
| Christened | Buried in all | Buried of plague | |||||
| Dec. | 24 | 231 | 170 | 0 | |||
| 31 | 195 | 174 | 0 | ||||
| 1636 | |||||||
| Jan. | 7 | 217 | 189 | 0 | |||
| 14 | 242 | 174 | 0 | ||||
| 21 | 220 | 190 | 0 | ||||
| 28 | 214 | 171 | 0 | ||||
| Feb. | 4 | 227 | 183 | 0 | |||
| 11 | 234 | 160 | 0 | ||||
| 18 | 207 | 203 | 0 | ||||
| 25 | 198 | 238 | 0 | ||||
| Mar. | 3 | 221 | 198 | 0 | |||
| 10 | 231 | 194 | 0 | ||||
| 17 | 244 | 187 | 0 | ||||
| 24 | 215 | 177 | 0 | ||||
| 31 | 193 | 196 | 0 | ||||
| Apr. | 7 | 202 | 199 | 2 | |||
| 14 | 221 | 205 | 4 | ||||
| 21 | 202 | 205 | 7 | ||||
| 28 | 271 | 210 | 4 | ||||
| May | 5 | 197 | 206 | 4 | |||
| 12 | 199 | 254 | 41 | ||||
| 19 | 171 | 244 | 22 | ||||
| 26 | 160 | 263 | 38 | ||||
| June | 2 | 189 | 276 | 51 | |||
| 9 | 153 | 275 | 64 | ||||
| 16 | 145 | 325 | 86 | ||||
| 23 | 149 | 257 | 65 | ||||
| 30 | 141 | 273 | 82 | ||||
| July | 7 | 152 | 265 | 64 | |||
| 14 | 142 | 298 | 86 | ||||
| 21 | 146 | 350 | 108 | ||||
| 28 | 183 | 365 | 136 | ||||
| Aug. | 4 | 152 | 394 | 181 | |||
| 11 | 166 | 465 | 244 | ||||
| 18 | 167 | 546 | 284 | ||||
| 25 | 161 | 690 | 380 | ||||
| Sept. | 1 | 163 | 835 | 536 | |||
| 8 | 153 | 921 | 567 | ||||
| 15 | 166 | 1106 | 728 | ||||
| 22 | 172 | 1018 | 645 | ||||
| 29 | 168 | 1211 | 796 | ||||
| Oct. | 6 | 170 | 1195 | 790 | |||
| 13 | 164 | 1117 | 682 | ||||
| 20 | 174 | 855 | 476 | ||||
| 27 | 133 | 779 | 404 | ||||
| Nov. | 3 | 153 | 1156 | 755 | |||
| 10 | 164 | 966 | 635 | ||||
| 17 | 143 | 827 | 512 | ||||
| 24 | 162 | 747 | 408 | ||||
| Dec. | 1 | 168 | 550 | 290 | |||
| 8 | 175 | 335 | 143 | ||||
| 15 | 134 | 324 | 79 | ||||
| 9,522 | 23,359 | 10,400 | |||||
The parishes chiefly affected were the same as in 1625 and 1603. Stepney is still wanting from the general bill; but after 1636 it was included therein, along with Newington, Lambeth, Westminster, Islington and Hackney. These omitted parishes doubtless contributed largely, Stepney in particular, so that the total of plague-deaths would have to be increased by perhaps two thousand. The following parishes had the severest mortalities:
Like the greater plagues of 1603 and 1625, that of 1636 appears to have begun in the suburbs[1053]. Taylor, the Water-poet, in reprinting his poem on the plague of 1625, with some notes for 1636, says that of 1076 plague-deaths from April 7 to July 28 (the summation in the annual bill comes to 864), only 40 had occurred within the walls, so that the general infection of the City must have followed that of the Liberties and out-parishes. As early in the epidemic as 31 May, according to a record of the Middlesex Sessions, “the plague increases most at Stepney,” wherefore the Greengoose Fair at Stratford was prohibited, (the parish of Stepney extending as far as Shoreditch)[1054]. From Taylor we learn that Gravesend and Faversham had calamitous visitations, and that the infection was in many other towns and villages.
The epidemic of 1636 was like the plague of 1625 in having been preceded by much typhus fever in London, and accompanied by the same, as many as 2360 deaths being put down to fever in the plague-year in the classified causes of death now issued regularly (since 1629) in their printed bills by the Parish Clerks’ Hall. The letters and state papers of the time bear witness to the usual exodus from the City, the movements of the Court, and personal incidents, which have no farther interest after the samples given for 1625. One incident relating to the worst week of the plague in London in 1636 is preserved: eleven persons were committed to Newgate on 5 October for going with one Samuel Underhill, a trumpeter, who died of the plague, to his grave with trumpets and swords drawn in the night time in Shoreditch[1055]. The profession still makes no appearance in the way of epidemiological writing; but some “necessary directions” were drawn up by the College of Physicians, in substance the same as certain statutes issued on the alarm of plague in 1630[1056].
Next year, 1637, the plague continued in London, causing 3082 deaths out of a total of 11,763 in the bills. In 1638 there were only 363 plague-deaths, but the total mortality was 13,624, or nearly 2000 more than in the previous year, when plague alone had claimed its 3000. What were the epidemic types of disease that caused the high mortality in 1638?