13 Memoirs of the Life and Writings of J. Coakley Lettsom, Thomas Joseph Pettigrew, 1817.
Webster mentions an epidemic in America in 1790, one in Europe in 1795, and another in Europe in 1797, but there seems to have been no general epidemic of sufficient importance to attract the attention of other writers upon the subject until 1798, when the malady again broke out in Russia and spread over the greater part of Europe, continuing to prevail in various regions till 1803, when it again appeared in England, and is described by several writers of that country.
From 1805 to 1827 influenza prevailed (according to Zuelzer, who tells us that few years during this interval were free from it) in frequently-recurring epidemics in Europe and America. Thompson mentions no visitation in England between 1803 and 1831.
In the year 1830 began a series of epidemics remarkable for their wide diffusion and the rapid succession with which they followed one upon another. The disease began in China; in September it reached the Indian Archipelago; it swept into Russia, and invaded Moscow in November; in January, 1831, it was raging in St. Petersburg; March found it in Warsaw; April in Eastern Prussia and Silesia; in May it prevailed in Denmark, Finland, and a great part of Germany, and in the same month it fell upon Paris; in June it affected England and Sweden; it was still creeping about Middle Europe and lingering in Great Britain at the end of July; in the early winter it swept southward into Italy, and westward across the Atlantic to North America, and was still harassing the inhabitants of certain regions of the United States in January and February, 1832. Meanwhile it continued in the East, spreading to Java, Farther India, and the Indian Archipelago. It continued in Hindostan after it had died out in Europe. But in January, 1833, it again visited Russia, and rolled thence southward and eastward over the most of Europe. It is recorded that by February it had reached Galicia and Eastern Prussia; in March it was in Prussia, Bohemia, and Warsaw, and had extended to Syria and Egypt; in April to many parts of Germany and Austria and to France and Great Britain. Midsummer found the disease yet prevailing in some districts of Germany and Northern Italy, and in the early autumn it was in Switzerland and Eastern France; in November it visited Naples.
Epidemics so frequent, so widespread, and so unsparing of individuals wherever the disease appeared could not fail to excite a deep and general interest. From this period the literature of the subject has been voluminous.
A brief period of repose ensued. For three years no epidemic occurred which was of sufficient importance to attract the attention of medical historians.
In December, 1837, influenza reappeared, and first, as so often before, in Russia; Sweden and Denmark were almost simultaneously affected; in January, 1837, it broke out in London, and rapidly swept over all England and into France and Germany. In January it appeared in Berlin, and shortly afterward in Dresden, Munich, and Vienna. The disease spread by February into Switzerland, and into Spain as far as Madrid by the end of March. In London almost the whole population was attacked, and the mortality was enormous. It is stated that the deaths were quadrupled during the prevalence of the disease. Large populations suffered most. This epidemic spread into the southern hemisphere, and prevailed at the same time, and consequently at exactly the opposite season that it prevailed north of the equator, in Sydney and at the Cape of Good Hope.
From 1837 to 1850-51 numerous epidemics of influenza occurred. Few years were exempt from them. The epidemic of 1847-48 has been described by many writers, and more particularly, as it occurred in London, by Peacock14 with great exactitude. It is estimated that one-fourth of the entire population of that city were more or less affected by the disease. The epidemic prevailed in London for six months, and, although the deaths registered for the entire period as from influenza amounted to only 1739, it is stated in the report of the registrar-general that during the six weeks the epidemic was at its height not less than five thousand persons died, in the metropolitan districts, in excess of the average mortality of the period, the excess showing itself in nearly every class of disease, the local maladies which had been the predominant affections being doubtless in many cases assigned as the cause of death. This epidemic affected between one-fourth and one-half of the population of Paris, and in Geneva the proportion of those attacked was not less than one-third of the entire population.
14 On the Influenza, or Epidemic Catarrhal Fever of 1847-48, Thomas Berill Peacock. M.D., 1848.
More or less widespread epidemics of influenza are recorded as having occurred in 1857-58 and 1860; in 1864 in Switzerland; in 1867 in Paris in the spring; and at various times in the United States and Canada.