Assuming that all the deaths so called in the three years 1832, 1833 and 1834 were true Asiatic cholera, that imported infection accounted for 1 in 5·68 deaths from all causes in Munster, 1 in 5·98 in Leinster, 1 in 9·86 in Connaught and 1 in 15·15 in Ulster. The proportion of attacks to fatalities in eight of the principal towns in the following table varies much, Belfast having comparatively few deaths for all its many cases, and Kilkenny three deaths to about five cases: these differences must have depended upon the number of cases of “cholerine” or diarrhoea which attended the true “spasmodic” or collapse-cholera, and may or may not have been counted in the returns.

Deaths from Asiatic Cholera in Ireland, 1832-33.

1832 1833
Country
deaths
Town
deaths
Country
deaths
Town
deaths
No. of
places with
Cholera
Leinster
Carlow 64 116 vi
Dublin 460 187 32 17 xxiv
Dublin City 5632 166
Kildare 108 72 55 104 xi
Kilkenny 91 14 130 29 ix
Kilkenny City 296 144
King’s 40 288 10 v
Longford 22 63 iii
Louth 115 189 viii
Meath 61 105 81 113 vii
Drogheda Town 491
Queen’s 17 111 16 iv
Westmeath 18 121 84 5 iv
Wexford 126 362 24 150 v
Wicklow 8 40 23 iv
Munster
Clare 453 281 166 8 xiii
Cork 325 1028 466 240 xxxv
Cork City 1385 234
Kerry 87 440 109 181 viii
Limerick 82 4 668 173 xvi
Limerick City 1105
Tipperary 198 910 224 208 xii
Waterford 52 52 48 79 ix
Waterford City 24 245
Ulster
Antrim 70 66 75 v
Belfast Town 418
Armagh 13 57 2 vi
Cavan 21 11 70 51 vi
Donegal 37 139 141 vii
Down 110 423 65 37 xiv
Fermanagh 4 50 9 iv
Londonderry 3 222 iv
Monaghan 64 50 13 43 iv
Tyrone 100 193 17 9 ix
Connaught
Galway 141 430 82 xii
Galway Town 596
Leitrim 1 101 vi
Mayo 151 325 12 68 xi
Roscommon 47 105 38 25 vii
Sligo 62 698 25 iv

The Cholera of 1832 in England.

The certainty that Asiatic cholera was at Sunderland in November and at Newcastle in December, 1831, led to quarantine of ships arriving in the Thames from the Wear and the Tyne. The early numbers of the ‘Cholera Gazette’ published lists of vessels from these northern coal ports detained at Stangate Creek on the Medway[1518]. At length about the middle of February, 1832, three suspicious cases occurred together in Rotherhithe, one of them being of a man who had been scraping the bottom of a Sunderland vessel. Other cases came close upon these in the parishes on both sides of the Thames from Rotherhithe and Limehouse to Lambeth and Chelsea, especially in the Southwark parishes.

The diagnosis of Asiatic cholera was vehemently contested for several weeks by a section of the profession, who frequented the Westminster Medical Society and had for their organ the ‘London Medical and Surgical Journal.’ The slow progress of the disease at first, and the apparent extinction of it for a week or two at the end of May (as at Glasgow and elsewhere in Scotland in the same weeks) encouraged these doubts, although the 994 fatalities in 1848 cases from 14 February to 15 May were quite unlike any experience of cholera nostras. After the river-side parishes, cases were reported most from other crowded parts, such as St Giles’s in the Fields. From the middle of June the infection became more severe and widely spread, still making the river-side parishes its chief seat, but extending beyond Southwark on one side, and on the north side to such localities as Fetter Lane, Field Lane and parts of the City. From the 15th of June to the 31st October the cases in London were 9142 and the deaths 4266; in November and December only thirty more cases were known, of which one half were fatal. The total for the year in London came to 11,020 cases with 5275 deaths. This was admitted to have been for Asiatic cholera a slight and partial visitation of the metropolis. London with a population of a million and a half had actually fewer deaths than Dublin with its two hundred thousand inhabitants. Paris had more cholera deaths in one week of April (5523 deaths, April 8-14) than London had in all the year.

The Asiatic Cholera of 1831-32 in England.

Deaths No. of
places
attacked
Places with highest
mortalities in each county
London 5275
Surrey, part of
Kent 135 xi Minster (Sheerness) 38
Sussex
Hampshire 91 ii Portsmouth 86, Southampton no return
Berkshire 52 iv Wantage 27
Middlesex, part of 62 iv Uxbridge 34, Edmonton 11
Buckinghamshire 105 iv Aylesbury 60, Olney 22
Oxfordshire 219 xii Oxford 86, Bicester 64
Northamptonshire
Huntingdonshire 45 iii Fenstanton 21, Ramsey 20, St Ives 4
Bedfordshire 40 ii Bedford 36
Cambridgeshire 208 iv Whittlesea 97, Ely 61, Wisbech 41
Essex 38 iv Barking 18, Chelmsford 10
Suffolk 1 i Woodbridge 1
Norfolk 232 vi Norwich 129, Lynn 49, Denver 27,
Yarmouth no return
Wiltshire 14 ii Chippenham 9, Farley 5, Salisbury no
return
Dorset 19 ii Bridport 16, Charmouth 3
Devon 1901 xxvii Plymouth 702, Devonport 228, East
Stonehouse 133, Exeter 386
Cornwall 308 xi St Paul 81, Penzance 64
Somerset 142 v Paulton 66, Bath 49, Tiverton 23
Gloucestershire 932 viii Bristol 630, Clifton 64, Gloucester 123,
Tewkesbury 76, Upton 34
Herefordshire
Shropshire 158 vii Shrewsbury 75, Oldbury 37, Madeley 27
Staffordshire 1870 xiv Bilston 693, Tipton 281, Sedgley 231,
Wolverhampton 193, King’s Winsford
83, Wednesbury 78, Walsall 77,
Newcastle-u.-Lyme 60, W. Bromwich
59, Darlaston 57, Stoke 46
Worcestershire 579 xi Dudley 77, Worcester 79, Kidderminster
67, Droitwich 63, Redditch 38
Warwickshire 188 xii Nuneaton 56, Coleshill 32, Birmingham
21
Leicestershire 5 i Castle Donington 5
Rutland
Lincolnshire 80 viii Gainsborough 41, Owston 17
Nottinghamshire 352 vii Nottingham and suburbs 322, Newark 25
Derbyshire 16 i Derby 16
Cheshire 111 vi Northwich 30, Stockport 29, Runcorn 18,
Nantwich 14, Chester 14, Brimmington
6
Lancashire 2835 xiv Liverpool 1523, Manchester 706, Salford
216, Warrington 168, Lancaster 114,
Wigan 30
West Riding, York 1416 xxvii{
{
Leeds 702, Sheffield 402, Hull 300, York
185, Wakefield 62, Rotherham 34, Selby
32, Goole 36, Bradford 30, Whitby 27,
Doncaster 26
East Riding, York 507 iiii
North Riding, York 47 ii
Durham 850 viii Sunderland 215, Gateshead 148, S. Shields
147, Stockton 126, Jarrow and Hebburn
70, Hetton &c. 97
Northumberland 1394 xiv Newcastle 801, Villages near 259, N.
Shields &c. 98, Berwick 84,
Tweedmouth 72, Blyth 42
Cumberland 702 vii Carlisle 265, Whitehaven 244, Workington
119, Maryport 42, Cockermouth 25,
Allonby 4
Westmoreland 68 i Kendal 68
Monmouth 15 ii Newport 13, Abergavenny 2
South Wales 343 vii Merthyr Tydvil 160, Swansea 152,
Haverfordwest 16
North Wales 140 viii Denbigh 47, Carnarvon 30, Flint 18,
Newtown 17
Isle of Man 146 i Douglas 146

It will appear from the annexed table (here compiled according to counties for the first time) that the cholera of 1832 visited most parts of England. The dates of outbreak at each place (omitted in the table) show that its great seasons everywhere, except at Sunderland, Newcastle and Musselburgh, were the summer and autumn. New centres or foci of infection were made in all directions, and in a good many small places there were epidemics which produced much alarm although the figures look insignificant in the statistical table. Some counties, such as Leicestershire, Herefordshire, Derbyshire, Northamptonshire, Lincolnshire, Suffolk, Sussex, Dorset, Wiltshire, and several of the Welsh counties, escaped with a few cases at perhaps one village or town. Some towns, such as Birmingham, Cheltenham, Cambridge and Hereford, had only a few cases (or none) in 1832 as in the later epidemics in England. Most of the towns which now head the list of high death-rates by common summer diarrhoea, chiefly infantile (as in the preceding chapter), had only a few imported cases but no real epidemic extension; these were Preston, Blackburn, Bury, Rochdale, Oldham, Bolton, Halifax, Leicester and Coventry; while Bradford, Stockport and Wigan had comparatively few. The greater epidemics, besides those which started the disease at Sunderland and Newcastle, were, in order of time, at Hull and Goole, Liverpool, Manchester, Warrington, Leeds, Sheffield, Nottingham, Bristol, Plymouth, with Devonport and Stonehouse, Southampton, Portsmouth, Exeter, Salisbury, various towns of the Black Country in South Staffordshire, Dudley, Merthyr Tydvil, Carlisle, Whitehaven, with other ports of the Cumberland coal-fields, and Douglas in the Isle of Man. Devonshire, Cornwall, the West Riding of Yorkshire, Worcestershire and Warwickshire had each a large number of minor centres, besides the greater foci at Plymouth and Exeter, and at Leeds and Sheffield. The severity of the disease in some parts of England called forth a few special accounts, from which certain representative details may be taken.

The most disastrous outbreak in all England was at Bilston, in the centre of the Black Country, near Wolverhampton[1519]. The first cases in that part of England were at Dudley early in June, in some travelling German broom-sellers. In the end of June a canal boatman from Manchester died of cholera in his boat four miles from Wolverhampton; the boat was sunk. In the first week of July another canal boatman died of cholera at Tipton, after returning from Liverpool. The infection became established during July in the parish of Tipton, thickly peopled with miners and iron-workers[1520]. At length on the 4th of August a case occurred in the adjoining town of Bilston, about two and a half miles to the south-east of Wolverhampton.