Yes, that does seem odd.  Which island are you doing and are you extracting the 
records or only looking for your line?  Just curious what others are doing.

Sam (Mazatlán, MX)

From: Mary Bordi
Sent: Saturday, March 2, 2019 10:45 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AZORES-Genealogy] July 1900 disaster Santa Maria?

I’m looking at deaths for another island. And indeed there are times when there 
are one or more deaths every day for weeks, with families losing several 
members.  So sad. 

And then there are months with only a few deaths. 

But I found one stretch of two months with no deaths at all and no notation 
that the records had been lost...and THAT made me wonder! (This was in the 
1850s.) 

Mary

On Saturday, March 2, 2019, 'Sam (Camas, WA)' via Azores Genealogy 
<[email protected]> wrote:
Linda;  Interesting thought, about epidemics being so much a part of everyday 
life.  Also, as Cheri said, could have been as simple as one child getting a 
communicable disease and passing it on the other child.  Since I first posted 
my question, I have come upon another two records showing twin infants who died 
within days of each other.  I’m extracting obits and it is so sad to see so 
many infants and toddlers dying in a month long period.  So far, it’s been 
almos 50/50 between adults and infants/toddlers.  I now understand better why 
you always hear of the short life expectancy in bygone times.  Many people 
lived into their 70’s & 80’s but; so many died as infants/toddlers that the 
average was brought way down.  I feel so bad for all those families.
 
Sam (Mazatlán, MX)
 
From: linda
Sent: Friday, March 1, 2019 8:28 PM
To: Azores Genealogy
Subject: [AZORES-Genealogy] Re: July 1900 disaster Santa Maria?
 
There are no major natural disasters listed here:
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_disasters_in_the_Azores
 
So, I'm with Cheri and am putting my money on an epidemic:
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diseases_and_epidemics_of_the_19th_century
 
A long while back, I read a 19th century travelogue that described the writer's 
ship's passengers as not being allowed to disembark at one of the Islands 
either 1) until the ship was cleared as being free of epidemic disease, or 2) 
not being allowed to disembark at all because the ship had come from a port 
where an epidemic had been occurring.  Sorry my recollection is vague and I 
don't recall the source. My point is, I suppose, that epidemics were so much a 
part of life that there was a bureaucracy in place to deal with them.

On Friday, March 1, 2019 at 4:51:36 PM UTC-8, Sam Koester wrote:
I’m doing obits right now and I have two siblings, one 11 months and the other 
15 days old that died 9 days apart in July of 1900. (July 20 and 29th)  So sad. 
 Out of curiosity, does anyone know of some disaster that occurred around that 
time on Santa Maria island?  Sickness, earthquake, ??
 
Sam (Mazatlán, MX)
 
 

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