|
Date |
Event(s) |
1 | 1616 | - 1616—1620: New England infections epidemic
Affected Southern New England, British North America, especially the Wampanoag people, and killed an estimated 30% to 90% of specific populations.
Unknown source, possibly leptospirosis with Weil syndrome. Classic explanations include yellow fever, bubonic plague, influenza, smallpox, chickenpox, typhus, and syndemic infection of hepatitis B and hepatitis D
|
2 | 1633 | - 1633—1634: Massachusetts smallpox epidemic
Made about 1,000 victims
|
3 | 1634 | - 1634—1640: Wyandot people epidemic of infections
Killed between 15,000 and 25,000 Wyandot people of North America.
|
4 | 1637 | - 1637—1637: London plague epidemic
Bubonic plague epidemic in London and Westminster, England - Killed about 10,000 people
|
5 | 1665 | - 1665—1666: Great Plague of London
Bubonic plague. Killed an estimated 100,000 individuals
|
6 | 1668 | - 1668—1668: France plague
Bubonic plague, killed 20,000 individuals.
|
7 | 1677 | - 1677—1678: Boston smallpox epidemic
Smallpox epidemic that killed 750 to 1,000 residents of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, British North America
|
8 | 1693 | - 1693—1693: Boston yellow fever epidemic
Killed 3,000 residents of Boston, Massachussetts.
|
9 | 1699 | - 1699—1699: Charleston and Philadelphia yellow fever epidemic
Killed 300 in Charleston, 220 in Philadelphia.
|
10 | 1702 | - 1702—1702: New York City yellow fever epidemic
Killed 500 residents of New York.
- 1702—1703: St. Lawrence Valley smallpox epidemic
Killed 300 settlers of New France along the Saint-Lawrence river valley.
|
11 | 1713 | - 1713—1715: North America measles epidemic
Killed an unknow number of residents of the Thirteen Colonies and New France, Canada
|