Galveston Texas 1873 Yellow Fever Notice of Quarantine Letterpress Broadside
Verso of 1873 Texas Broadside Showing Manuscript Ink Offsetting
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Notice of Quarantine. Galveston, Texas, May 15th, 1873

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(Western United States: Texas) Notice of Quarantine. Galveston, Texas, May 15th, 1873; signed in type, "C. W. HURLEY, Mayor." Galveston, Texas: Mayor's Office, Galveston, Texas, 1873. FIRST EDITION.

Letterpress broadside, measuring 13-15/16" x 8-1/2". The sheet exhibits one horizontal and two vertical folds from contemporary filing. Physical defects are limited to two minor, short closed tears to the margin of the bottom edge and one to both the left and right margins at the horizontal fold line. The verso displays historical ink offsetting from a manuscript document against which it was stored. The overall condition of the broadside is NEAR FINE.

Epidemic Mitigation and Maritime Commerce on the Texas Coast

This broadside represents the official municipal posting of a critical statewide maritime quarantine in Galveston, issued in response to a major outbreak of yellow fever. During the 19th century, the Texas Gulf Coast suffered repeated epidemics that severely disrupted public health and regional commerce. At the time of this publication in 1873, the etiology of yellow fever was poorly understood, with medical authorities operating under the theory of miasma (foul air) and contaminated shipping ballast rather than vector transmission.

The mandate, signed in type by Galveston Mayor Charles W. Hurley, effectively restricted incoming shipping traffic at the port—the primary economic engine of Texas—to prevent the introduction of the disease from arriving vessels. It was not until the turn of the 20th century that scientific consensus proved the disease was mosquito-borne, leading to targeted sanitation, drainage programs, and eventual eradication in the United States.

Bibliographic Documentation and Institutional Census

Ephemeral broadsides documenting early public health enforcement in the Western Gulf region have a low survival rate due to their temporary administrative nature. This specific imprint is documented in the definitive bibliography by Ernest W. Winkler and Llerena B. Friend, Check List of Texas Imprints, where it is recorded as Winkler & Friend No. 3210.

At the time of that compilation, the authors located only a single copy, preserved in the Texas State Archives and Library in Austin. A current global institutional search via WorldCat confirms that no copies are recorded in any online institutional collections worldwide, marking this duplicate survival as an undocumented commercial scarcity.

A SIGNIFICANT AND EXCEPTIONALLY RARE SURVIVAL OF RECONSTRUCTION-ERA TEXAS PRINTING, FORMING A CRITICAL RECORD OF NINETEENTH-CENTURY AMERICAN PUBLIC HEALTH AND MARITIME QUARANTINE HISTORY.

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