1853 Copenhagen cholera outbreak
The 1853 Copenhagen cholera outbreak was a severe outbreak of cholera which occurred in Copenhagen, Denmark in 1853 as part of the third cholera pandemic. It killed about 4,800 people.
Background
Medical professionals had since the 1840s warned against the dismal sanitary conditions in the city as a combination of a lack of proper sanitary installations and services and increasing overpopulation due to the ban of urban development outside the City Walls.[1]
Outbreak
The outbreak struck on 11 June 1853 and lasted until October when it faded out. A total of 7,219 infections were reported of whom 4,737 (56,7%) died. From Copenhagen the outbreak spread to the provinces where 24 towns were hit and 1,951 people died.[2]
Aftermath
The cholera outbreak was a key factor in the decision to decommission Copenhagen's fortifications, although the step was long overdue and had been underway for decades. The cholera outbreak also contributed to the city's decision to build a new cattle market, the so-called Brown Meat District, and a safer municipal water supply.
It also resulted in several housing developments built by philanthropic organisations to provide healthy homes outside the city centre for people of few means. The Medical Society completed the first stage of the housing development now known as Brumleby in Østerbro in 1857. They are considered Denmark's first example of social housing. The Classenske Fideicommis acquired a three-hectare site in Frederiksberg in 1856 and constructed the Classen Terraces (De Classenske Boliger) between 1866 and 1881.[3]
Notable victims
- Frederik Clauson-Kaas, hofmarskal
- Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg, painter
- P.C. Hagemann, architect
- Carl Henckel, printmaker
- Frantz Christopher von Jessen, overpostmester
- Jacob Ræder, military officer
- Adolph Schätzig, photographer
References
- ↑ "Rækkehushistorie". Kartoffelrækkerne. Retrieved 2011-01-20.
- ↑ "Koleraen i København i 1853" (PDF). Ditte Wonsyld. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
- ↑ "Kirkens historie" (in Danish). Godthåbskirken. Retrieved 2012-11-27.