The Black Vomit in Charleston: Dr. David Ramsay and the Reopening of the Slave Trade in Early National South Carolina, 1803-1808
Keywords:
South Carolina, Slave Trade, Public HealthAbstract
In December 1803, the South Carolina General Assembly voted to reopen the African slave trade, which operated in full force until it was federally banned in 1808. Approximately 75,000 slaves––nearly one-fifth of all slaves imported to North America––were imported during this short four-year span. Immediately before the trade reopened, the Medical Society of South Carolina advised state officials to relax quarantine measures for yellow fever. This advice was issued at a precipitous moment during an ongoing national debate over the contagiousness of yellow fever and whether or not it was imported. This paper examines the intersection between private interest and the state through the lens of public health. It suggests that the Medical Society of South Carolina––under the direction of Dr. David Ramsay––placed public health at risk in order to facilitate the slave trade by relaxing quarantine measures for yellow fever prior to its reopening.
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