As we cope with the various levels of disruption in our daily routines made necessary by the response to the COVID-19 virus, it is interesting to look back at the way contagious disease was handled in our community in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In small communities like Rochester, there were no hospitals at the time. A village might be fortunate enough to have a physician or two in residence, but there were no cures and few effective therapies available for the primary … [Read more...]
Rochester’s Pest House Was an Early Answer to Outbreaks of Disease
Filed Under: A Look Back, The Community Edge Tagged With: Barkham millrace, cholera, Coronavirus, COVID-19, Curtis-Barkham grist mill, diphtheria, Hacker street, Pontiac City Hospital, Pontiac General Hospital, Quarter Street, Rochester Era, Rochester Packing House, Rochester-Avon pest house, scarlet fever, smallpox, tuberculosis, typhoid fever