C1906

[Plague] Map of the City of Sydney and Adjacent Municipalities. This diagram shows the places at which PLAGUE-rats were taken during 1905.

Mapmaker:

John Ashburton Thompson (1846 - 1915)

Very rare map of Sydney made following the fifth outbreak of the plague in New South Wales in 1905. The map contains the following which are marked in red on the map: . Places at which plague rats were taken … Read Full Description

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[Plague] Map of the City of Sydney and Adjacent Municipalities. This diagram shows the places at which PLAGUE-rats were taken during 1905. TOWN PLANS

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[Plague] Map of the City of Sydney and Adjacent Municipalities. This diagram shows the places at which PLAGUE-rats were taken during 1905. TOWN PLANS

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Full Title:

[Plague] Map of the City of Sydney and Adjacent Municipalities. This diagram shows the places at which PLAGUE-rats were taken during 1905.

Date:

C1906

Mapmaker:

John Ashburton Thompson (1846 - 1915)

Condition:

In good condition, with folds as issued.

Technique:

Lithograph printed in colour.

Image Size: 

670mm 
x 420mm

Paper Size: 

750mm 
x 507mm
AUTHENTICITY
[Plague] Map of the City of Sydney and Adjacent Municipalities. This diagram shows the places at which PLAGUE-rats were taken during 1905. - Antique Map from 1906

Genuine antique
dated:

1906

Description:

Very rare map of Sydney made following the fifth outbreak of the plague in New South Wales in 1905. The map contains the following which are marked in red on the map:

. Places at which plague rats were taken
. Places at which persons who had the plague were in employed
. Places at which persons who had the plague resided.
At right is a table showing places at which, the first and last dates and places plague rats were taken.
Sold with the part of the Government Report relating to the area.

The first case of the Bubonic Plague reported in Australia was that of Arthur Paine on 19 January 1900. He was a delivery man who worked at Central Wharf where the ship carrying infected rats would have docked. By the end of February, 30 cases had been reported and the government was concerned the colony was on the brink of an epidemic.

During the Hong Kong epidemic in 1894, the French and Japanese epidemiologists Alexander Yersin and Kitasato Shibasaburo individually discovered the pathogen that causes the disease. Another French epidemiologist, Paul-Louis Simond, then proved during the 1896 plague outbreak in Bombay that fleas (Xenopsylla cheopsis) could act as vectors for transmission between rats.

However, this theory was not widely accepted by the medical community until the chief of the New South Wales Board of Health, John Ashburton Thompson, isolated the Y pestis bacterium in fleas on dead rats captured in Sydney. Ashburton Thompson’s reports were ‘models of cogent reasoning’ and his experiments were instrumental in changing public health methods around the world to combat bubonic plague.

Mapmaker:

John Ashburton Thompson (1846-1915)
Thompson was a British-Australian physician and an international authority on plague and leprosy.

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