The
European colonisation of Australia, was accompanied by epidemic diseases to which the original inhabitants had little resistance. Colds,
influenza
Influenza, commonly known as "the flu", is an infectious disease caused by influenza viruses. Symptoms range from mild to severe and often include fever, runny nose, sore throat, muscle pain, headache, coughing, and fatigue. These symptoms ...
s,
tuberculosis
Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease usually caused by '' Mycobacterium tuberculosis'' (MTB) bacteria. Tuberculosis generally affects the lungs, but it can also affect other parts of the body. Most infections show no symptoms, in ...
(TB), and
measles
Measles is a highly contagious infectious disease caused by measles virus. Symptoms usually develop 10–12 days after exposure to an infected person and last 7–10 days. Initial symptoms typically include fever, often greater than , cough, ...
were major killers. Such diseases devastated Aboriginal populations, weakened their cultures, and often left them in no position to resist the newcomers. Within perhaps as little as six months of the arrival of the
First Fleet
The First Fleet was a fleet of 11 ships that brought the first European and African settlers to Australia. It was made up of two Royal Navy vessels, three store ships and six convict transports. On 13 May 1787 the fleet under the command ...
,
venereal disease
Sexually transmitted infections (STIs), also referred to as sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and the older term venereal diseases, are infections that are spread by sexual activity, especially vaginal intercourse, anal sex, and oral se ...
was already a serious problem for local Aboriginal peoples; but the first disease to produce a major fall in the Aboriginal population around Sydney was the
1789 outbreak, some 16 months after the Fleet arrived, of what Governor Phillip and others referred to as “smallpox”.
Watkin Tench, a captain in the Marines, wrote that, "Pustules, similar to those occasioned in the smallpox, were thickly spread on the bodies; but how a disease to which our former observations had led us to suppose them strangers could at once have introduced itself, and spread so widely, seemed inexplicable."
A full list of
smallpox
Smallpox was an infectious disease caused by variola virus (often called smallpox virus) which belongs to the genus Orthopoxvirus. The last naturally occurring case was diagnosed in October 1977, and the World Health Organization (WHO) c ...
outbreaks in Australia falls into two main groups. Firstly, there were three widely-spaced "Aboriginal" epidemics which devastated Aboriginal populations but largely spared the colonists. Two of these outbreaks were recorded in New South Wales: in 1789 and in 1830. Later there was a long-running outbreak in the 1860s, which spread through much of Northern and Western Australia and down to the Great Australian Bight in the south. In the second group, there were six major ship-borne outbreaks in the nineteenth century, in 1857, 1868-1869, 1871, 1881-1882, 1884-1886, 1887 and 1893. These were successfully confined to port cities, and predominantly affected European colonists. Thereafter, further brushes with imported smallpox were relatively minor.
Although the
electron microscope
An electron microscope is a microscope that uses a beam of accelerated electrons as a source of illumination. As the wavelength of an electron can be up to 100,000 times shorter than that of visible light photons, electron microscopes have a hi ...
, which is capable of seeing and distinguishing viruses, did not begin to become available to doctors until the 1940s, there is little doubt that at least the second group of outbreaks were true smallpox. They had its typical death-rate of around one death per four recorded infections, and its relatively slow infection rate. They did not selectively kill Aborigines, and there was no mystery as to their origin. In total this second group killed about one hundred people.
The first group of outbreaks, which primarily affected non-Europeans, was more deadly, spread more rapidly, and had a much greater effect upon the history of Australia and the current situation of its Aboriginal peoples. The historian Judy Campbell remarks, “Between 1780 and 1870 smallpox itself was the major single cause of Aboriginal deaths. The consequences of Aboriginal smallpox are an integral part of modern Australian history.”
The 1789 outbreak, in particular, has been much debated. Several medical experts and anthropologists have argued that it cannot have been smallpox and was probably chickenpox—a highly infectious disease, with partly similar symptoms, to which Europeans though not Aborigines had considerable immunity. The famous virologist
Frank Fenner, who played a major role in the worldwide elimination of smallpox, remarked in 1985:
Since Fenner’s 1985 remarks, further historical evidence has been produced, and opinions have hardened. The medical experts Ford and Carmody insist that the failure of the 1789 outbreak to affect Europeans, despite what they consider abundant opportunities, rules out smallpox; yet most historians continue to prefer the traditional view that it was smallpox. (The journals of the
First Fleet
The First Fleet was a fleet of 11 ships that brought the first European and African settlers to Australia. It was made up of two Royal Navy vessels, three store ships and six convict transports. On 13 May 1787 the fleet under the command ...
’s surgeons have not survived, but historians infer that they, like Governor
Arthur Phillip
Admiral Arthur Phillip (11 October 1738 – 31 August 1814) was a British Royal Navy officer who served as the first governor of the Colony of New South Wales.
Phillip was educated at Greenwich Hospital School from June 1751 unti ...
, called it smallpox.) The extent to which smallpox and chickenpox in 1789 were seen as separate diseases is a grey area.
Among those who believe the disease was smallpox, there are two main theories: that it was introduced from Sulawesi in Indonesia by Macassan traders, and that it was brought directly to south-eastern Australia by European ships. Some, like the independent scholar Christopher Warren, have insisted both that the disease was smallpox and that it was probably released by British colonists in a deliberate act of
biological warfare. This view has resonated with some Aboriginal authorities, including professors Maynard and Langton, and the medical officer Dr Mark Wenitong.
However, the historians Henry Reynolds, Peter Dowling, and Cassandra Pybus still regard this theory as unproven.
Outbreak of 1789
This disease swiftly inflicted a huge toll on the local
Eora
The Eora (''Yura'') are an Aboriginal Australian people of New South Wales. Eora is the name given by the earliest European settlers to a group of Aboriginal people belonging to the clans along the coastal area of what is now known as the Sy ...
population of Aborigines, causing most of those not infected to flee the region. The epidemic probably began in March 1789, and “subsided by early May”. Early in April 1789, British observers noticed the sudden disappearance of the "native canoes" from the Harbour's many coves, investigated, and described the pitiable conditions of the sick or dying Aborigines they discovered there.
The naval officer
William Bradley who sailed into Sydney on 9 May 1789 was shocked by the "havoc". He noted that some of those abandoned in rock shelters seemed to have died of thirst while too sick to seek water, and that children had often perished beside a dead parent. Another naval officer
John Hunter agreed that thirst or hunger had increased the mortality of sufferers “immediately deserted by their friends and left to perish in their helpless situation for want of sustenance.” Judy Campbell in her 2002 book ''Invisible Invaders'' summed up that the disease’s initial impact in 1789 “was especially severe because of shock, flight, and fear, as well as the virus itself.” Bradley, unlike Tench, thought it an open question whether the Aborigines were previously "strangers" to smallpox, while Lieutenant King in his journal was sure they were not; and this has remained a point of contention among historians. Most point to the lack of visible scarring at first contact; but some, including Robert Barnes and Alan Frost, feel that since three observers, King, Hunter and Collins "demonstrated that the Aborigines had a name for it", the disease was more likely a pre-existing, if infrequent, visitor.
The precise proportion of Aborigines that perished is difficult to determine, though Governor Phillip estimated that perhaps half had died; and the Aborigine
Bennelong
Woollarawarre Bennelong ( 1764 – 3 January 1813), also spelt Baneelon, was a senior man of the Eora, an Aboriginal Australian people of the Port Jackson area, at the time of the first British settlement in Australia in 1788. Bennelong serv ...
also believed that half the Eora in the Sydney district had died. After a few weeks the canoes returned, and 20 were seen passing Sydney Cove on 2 June 1789; but Phillip’s expeditions in subsequent months showed him that the disease, if it began near Sydney, had rapidly moved on to nearby Aboriginal tribes or populations.
The Aborigines do not seem to have associated this disease with the settlement. In mid 1788, they had shown strong resentment of the colony, with several spearings; but by 1791 they had become regular peaceful visitors, even to the Governor’s House, as depicted in William Bradley’s watercolours.
John Hunter noted, "before I left Port Jackson, the natives very familiar and intimate with every person in the settlement; many of them took up their rest every night in some of the gentlemen's houses". Yet, in 1789 the outbreak reduced not just the number of Aborigines living near the new settlement but also their fighting strength and presumably their confidence in their culture. The historian Peter Dowling argues that it probably put an end to any possibility of Aborigines attacking and destroying the colony in its first years.
Like smallpox, this outbreak produced abundant small pustules which often left permanent scarring on survivors. Though it is probable that other recently-introduced diseases were already at work, it is clear that this pustular disease was the main killer of Aborigines. Carmody and Hunter calculated in 2014 that if the disease was really smallpox it would have caused some 30 to 50 recorded cases within the colony, especially among the 84 children. Those who believe the disease was smallpox counter-argue that in early 1789 there was simply not enough contact with the colonists for the disease to reach them.
Some have cited official correspondence in which Governor
Arthur Phillip
Admiral Arthur Phillip (11 October 1738 – 31 August 1814) was a British Royal Navy officer who served as the first governor of the Colony of New South Wales.
Phillip was educated at Greenwich Hospital School from June 1751 unti ...
lamented his inability to make contact with Aborigines. Yet the memoirs of the colony’s Lieutenant Governor
David Collins David Collins may refer to:
Persons
* David Collins (Hampshire cricketer), 18th-century cricketer
* David Collins (New Zealand cricketer) (1887–1967)
* David Collins (Scottish footballer) (1912–?)
* David Collins (Australian footballer) ( ...
suggest that convicts and some of the colony’s children may not have had the same problem. He describes, "large parties of the convicts of both sexes on those days in which they were not wanted for labour", holding regular parties with friendly Aborigines in an adjoining cove "where they danced and sung with apparent good humour". Collins also says that: This sailor on the ''Supply'', known as Joseph Jeffries, died on 2 May 1789 without, as Dowling notes, transmitting it to any of his shipmates. Phillip twice came across groups of sick or dying Aborigines and had them carried back into the colony and carefully treated by the surgeons. In each case, the adults died but a child survived, and was later adopted into a colonist family. No Europeans seem to have caught the disease from these patients; but an Aborigine living in the colony, known as Arabanoo, who helped care for the Aboriginal patients, caught the disease and died.
Such evidence led to the 1985 debate between Fenner and Hingston (see below) on whether the 1789 disease could really have been smallpox.
The epidemic also began a change in how Aborigines were seen by Europeans. The surgeon
George Bouchier Worgan
George Bouchier Worgan (May 1757 – 4 March 1838) was an English naval surgeon who accompanied the First Fleet to Australia. He made several expeditions to the Hawkesbury River and Broken Bay areas north of Sydney and spent a year on Norfolk Isl ...
had written of the local
Eora
The Eora (''Yura'') are an Aboriginal Australian people of New South Wales. Eora is the name given by the earliest European settlers to a group of Aboriginal people belonging to the clans along the coastal area of what is now known as the Sy ...
Aborigines that they: "seemingly enjoy uninterrupted Health, and live to a great Age". Yet as syphilis, TB, influenzas and pneumonias began to afflict the Aborigines, they began to be seen as a diseased and even a dying race. Looking back in around 1970, the poet
Les Murray wrote of how "The thoughtful savage with Athenian flanks/ fades from the old books", and described how the Aborigines, no longer seen as a threat or as rivals for land, began to be seen as sad exotica, having "the noon trees' spiritual walk", while perhaps "pathetic with sores".
Thomas Keneally
Thomas Michael Keneally, AO (born 7 October 1935) is an Australian novelist, playwright, essayist, and actor. He is best known for his non-fiction novel ''Schindler's Ark'', the story of Oskar Schindler's rescue of Jews during the Holocaust, wh ...
in his 1967 novel
Bring Larks and Heroes
''Bring Larks and Heroes'' is a 1967 novel by Australian author Thomas Keneally which won the Miles Franklin Award in 1967.
Plot summary
The novel is set in an unidentified Penal colony in the South Pacific, which bears a superficial resembla ...
, based loosely on the Sydney settlement, makes smallpox (which he describes as afflicting both races) a symbol of the settlement’s spiritual sickness.
Outbreaks of 1830-1831 and 1860s
The 1830s and 1860s outbreaks may well have begun earlier and continued longer than written records reveal. Dowling, for instance, prefers to list the 1830-31 outbreak as 1828-1832. It is also possible, if the 1789 outbreak marked the original infection, that later ones were flare-ups of a disease that now had a permanent epidemic presence in some part of Australia.
These later outbreaks need not have been the same disease as the 1789 one, but they are linked to it by certain arguments. In 1831 the surgeon John Mair reported that several of his informants believed that Aborigines with scars from a much older epidemic were immune to the current one. Thus, the debate between the surgeons Mair and Busby (see below), on whether the 1830-1831 outbreak was smallpox or chickenpox, has implications also for the 1789 epidemic.
The 1860s outbreak or outbreaks have not always been seen as such a major episode in "settlement history", yet they produced a fairly high death rate, and once again overwhelmingly among Aborigines. Like the two previous outbreaks, these are recorded as having travelled rapidly, but this time far more widely. It is generally believed that they entered Australia in the tropical North, and then spread south and west across much of the continent. If they were smallpox, as has been commonly believed, then their rapid spread might support those who argue that the 1789 outbreak could also have been smallpox, brought to Northern Australia from Indonesia in the 1780s and then transmitted overland to Sydney. However, Cumpston records a Northern Territory Medical Officer puzzling in 1906 that the historical records of smallpox invading from the North, and being transmitted as far south as “Central Australia”, were incompatible with smallpox’s failure to behave like this in his day, and adding, “… No satisfactory explanation offers itself.”
Carmody and Hunter, who argue that the 1789 outbreak was chickenpox, do not comment specifically on these later outbreaks, but they remark, as a general principle, that "Chickenpox is about five times more infectious than smallpox
..and hence fast nationwide transmission is more plausible for chickenpox.
Smallpox eradication
The
smallpox vaccine started to be produced in Australia in 1917, and in 1932 community immunization for the public began. The last reported smallpox case in Australia was in 1938. Smallpox vaccination ceased in 1980 after smallpox was certified
eradicated
The word "Eradication" is derived from Latin word "radix" which means "root". It may refer to:
* Eradication of infectious diseases (human), the reduction of the global incidence of an infectious disease in humans to zero
* Eradication of infecti ...
worldwide in 1979.
Macassan ships plus overland transmission of smallpox
The theory that smallpox first came to northern Australia from Indonesia, probably with
Macassan
Makassar (, mak, ᨆᨀᨔᨑ, Mangkasara’, ) is the capital of the Indonesian province of South Sulawesi. It is the largest city in the region of Eastern Indonesia and the country's fifth-largest urban center after Jakarta, Surabaya, Medan ...
traders and fishers, and then reached southern Australia along Aboriginal trade routes, has been a major rival to the “brought/released by the British” and the chickenpox theories. Chronologically, the resulting debates, as summarized below, have tended to proceed in a leapfrogging fashion, with proponents of each of the three main theories often producing new versions of their own theory, while rejecting as implausible the latest versions of the two opposing theories.
Medical scientists such as Sir
Edward Stirling and Sir
John Cleland published a number of books and articles between 1911 and 1966 suggesting that smallpox arrived in Northern Australia from an Asian source, a hypothesis that later scholars usually related to
Makassan contact with Australia
Makassar people from the region of Sulawesi in Indonesia began visiting the coast of northern Australia sometime around the middle of the 18th century, first in the Kimberley region, and some decades later in Arnhem Land. They were men who co ...
. While there were cases of smallpox in the city of Macassar in
Sulawesi
Sulawesi (), also known as Celebes (), is an island in Indonesia. One of the four Greater Sunda Islands, and the world's eleventh-largest island, it is situated east of Borneo, west of the Maluku Islands, and south of Mindanao and the Sulu Ar ...
during 1789, there are no reports of it occurring prior to that period. However,
smallpox had long been present in other islands of South East Asia – possibly as early as the 4th century, according to virologist
Frank Fenner. There were outbreaks of smallpox on the islands of the
Indonesian archipelago
The islands of Indonesia, also known as the Indonesian Archipelago ( id, Kepulauan Indonesia) or Nusantara, may refer either to the islands comprising the country of Indonesia or to the geographical groups which include its islands.
History ...
throughout the 18th century. These included, for example, major epidemics in the
Sultanate of Tidore (in the Moluccas) during the 1720s, the
Sultanate of Banjar (South Kalimantan), in 1734, 1750–51, 1764–65 and 1778–79; and in southern
Sumatra
Sumatra is one of the Sunda Islands of western Indonesia. It is the largest island that is fully within Indonesian territory, as well as the sixth-largest island in the world at 473,481 km2 (182,812 mi.2), not including adjacent i ...
during the 1750s, the 1770s, and in 1786. Macassans had contact with these areas both directly and indirectly (through foreign traders and invaders).
The Macassan theory was also among those considered in his 1914 ''The History of Small-pox in Australia from 1788 to 1908'' by the director of the
Australian Quarantine Service, Dr
J. H. L. Cumpston.
Cumpston was less certain about the earlier outbreaks, but argued that the Macassan theory best explained the source and routes of the 1860s outbreak(s).
Professor
Noel Butlin
Noel Butlin AC (19 December 1921 - 2 April 1991) was a distinguished Australian economic historian, considered "one of the most outstanding Australian social scientists of his generation, and one of the major international figures in economic hi ...
, while advancing his alternative theory that smallpox was released in 1789 near Sydney, rejected the Macassan theory. He argued in 1983 that while Macassan fishermen could possibly "have landed the virus on the Australian mainland at some stage their ability to do so was limited". He contended that it is highly unlikely that this virus should have been brought down from the
Gulf of Carpentaria
The Gulf of Carpentaria (, ) is a large, shallow sea enclosed on three sides by northern Australia and bounded on the north by the eastern Arafura Sea (the body of water that lies between Australia and New Guinea). The northern boundary is ...
to coincide with the first major outbreak "just fifteen months after the landing of the first fleet". Besides, he argued, the time factor connected to Macassan voyages (of more than seven to eight weeks), the type of vessels, the limited potential for contact between Aboriginal people and fishermen, the lack of clothing as a carrier, and the fact that the virus is destroyed or seriously reduced in contact with salt water, makes the Macassan theory highly unlikely: "
nfectedMacassans would be either dead or fully recovered long before reaching the Gulf of Carpentaria. He thought it more likely, therefore, that in 1789 the virus had somehow escaped from inoculation kits carried by the First Fleet’s surgeons.
In 1986 C. C. Macknight, an authority on the centuries-old
interaction between Indigenous Australians and the people of Makassar (
Sulawesi
Sulawesi (), also known as Celebes (), is an island in Indonesia. One of the four Greater Sunda Islands, and the world's eleventh-largest island, it is situated east of Borneo, west of the Maluku Islands, and south of Mindanao and the Sulu Ar ...
, later part of Indonesia), disagreed, and revived the theory that smallpox was introduced to Australia by Makassan mariners visiting
Arnhem Land
Arnhem Land is a historical region of the Northern Territory of Australia, with the term still in use. It is located in the north-eastern corner of the territory and is around from the territory capital, Darwin. In 1623, Dutch East India Compan ...
. In 1993 Butlin appeared to repent his earlier certainty that Macassan transmission was impossible, writing that smallpox had “certainly been delivered to parts of northern Australia and possibly more widely from Macassan praus”.
In her 2002 book, ''Invisible Invaders'', the historian Judy Campbell – advised by Fenner – reviewed reports of disease amongst Aboriginal people from 1780 to 1880, including the smallpox epidemics of 1789–90, the 1830s and the 1860s. Campbell argues that the evidence, including that contained in these reports, shows that, while many diseases such as tuberculosis ''were'' introduced by British colonists, this was not so for smallpox. She argues that the speculations of British responsibility made by other historians were based on tenuous evidence, largely on the mere coincidence that the 1789–90 epidemic was first observed afflicting the Aboriginal people not long after the establishment of the first British colonial settlement. Campbell argues instead that the north–south route of transmission of the 1860s epidemics (which is generally agreed), also applied in the earlier ones. She is confident that all three were smallpox.
Campbell notes that the fleets of fast Macassan fishing vessels, propelled by monsoonal winds, reached Australia after being at sea for as little as ten to fifteen days, well within the incubation period of smallpox. The numbers of people travelling in the fleets were large enough to sustain smallpox for extended periods of time without it “burning out”. The Macassans spent up to six months fishing along the northern Australian coastline and Aboriginal people had "day-to-day contact with the islanders. Aboriginals visited the praus and the camps the visitors set up on shore, they talked and traded...." She also remarks that Butlin, writing in 1983, "did not recognize that Aboriginals were ‘great travellers’, who spread infection over long distances
.. She believes that smallpox was spread through their extensive social and trading contacts, as well as by Aboriginal people fleeing from the disease. Campbell also cites British historian
Charles Wilson, who cited "medical microbiology" in disagreeing with Butlin about the origins of the 1789 outbreak, and "doubted his estimates of its demographic impact", as well as "First Fleet historian
Alan Frost
Alan J. Frost , (born 29 March 1943) is an Australian academic and professor emeritus at La Trobe University. A major theme of his research has involved the European exploration of the Pacific Ocean over the second half of the eighteenth centur ...
hoalso disagreed with Butlin's views".
Two proponents of the deliberate release hypothesis, Craig Mear (2008) and Michael J. Bennett (2009) have disputed Campbell's Macassan hypothesis, at least for the 1789 outbreak. However, Macknight re-entered the debate in 2011, declaring: "The overwhelming probability must be that it
mallpoxwas introduced, like the later epidemics, by
acassan trepangers on the north coast and spread across the continent to arrive in Sydney quite independently of the new settlement there." In 2013 Macknight suggested that “substantial contact” between Macassan trepangers and Aborigines in Northern Australia began “around 1780”, making the disease’s appearance near Sydney in 1789 entirely plausible. In his view, it was, for the Sydney region, “a completely virgin field event, without the effect of previous epidemics.”
The independent scholar Christopher Warren (2014), in an expanded statement of his case that smallpox was deliberately released by the
Royal Marines
The Corps of Royal Marines (RM), also known as the Royal Marines Commandos, are the UK's special operations capable commando force, amphibious light infantry and also one of the five fighting arms of the Royal Navy. The Corps of Royal Marine ...
in 1789, rejected the notion that the 1789 epidemic had originated from Macassar. He claimed that there was no evidence of a major outbreak of smallpox in Macassar before 1789; that there were no Indigenous trade routes that would have enabled overland transmission from Arnhem Land to Port Jackson; that the
Makassan
Makassar (, mak, ᨆᨀᨔᨑ, Mangkasara’, ) is the capital of the Indonesian province of South Sulawesi. It is the largest city in the region of Eastern Indonesia and the country's fifth-largest urban center after Jakarta, Surabaya, Medan ...
theory was contradicted by Aboriginal oral tradition; and that 1829 was the earliest point at which there was possible evidence that Makassans had been the source of a smallpox outbreak. Macknight, replying in ''The Canberra Times'' on 18 December 2021 and again o
29 December 2021to a letter of 15 December by Christopher Warren o
“The Smallpox Debate” remarked that “Many such historical issues are judgements of probability and require a full reading of all the relevant literature”, but said that Warren’s alternative theory of deliberate infection by the Royal Marines was “very, very probably wrong”.
Smallpox and chickenpox: confused yet distinct
Those who attempt to identify "smallpox" or "chickenpox" in Australia’s early colonial documents face a complication. These terms may not then have had their modern meanings. Today the
Germ theory of disease
The germ theory of disease is the currently accepted scientific theory for many diseases. It states that microorganisms known as pathogens or "germs" can lead to disease. These small organisms, too small to be seen without magnification, invade h ...
is widely known and accepted among scientific circles. The theory distinguishes infectious diseases by the microscopic pathogens that produce them. When the same pathogen produces varied effects, modern medical researchers often suggest that differing populations have differing degrees of immunity. Yet surgeons before the second half of the nineteenth-century less often considered such a possibility, because when they diagnosed a "disease" they were identifying a
syndrome, a set of symptoms or “disorders”, rather than a pathogen.” To the English physician Richard Morton writing in 1694, "chickenpox" was simply a vernacular term for the "most benign" (i.e. least
virulent
Virulence is a pathogen's or microorganism's ability to cause damage to a host.
In most, especially in animal systems, virulence refers to the degree of damage caused by a microbe to its host. The pathogenicity of an organism—its ability to ca ...
) forms of smallpox. Thus, in the words of two modern virologists, “chickenpox (''Varicella'') was confused with smallpox until the 1800s, when both illnesses became better understood.” However, they note that useful laboratory tests for distinguishing between ''Variola'' and ''Varicella'' infections (indirectly, from their effects on tissue samples) were not available before the 1890s.
While all populations seem at risk from smallpox, some have considerable immunity to the chickenpox virus; and among Europeans chickenpox often produces simply a brief but painful disease of early childhood. Yet early surgeons could not rely upon its usually milder symptoms to distinguish it from smallpox. One reason is that smallpox itself was variable. Even when produced by ''Variola major'' (the more deadly of the two species of "true" smallpox) smallpox still had at least four different "presentations", with very different levels of severity and mortality.
It was only in the mid twentieth century, when doctors could distinguish with certainty between ''Variola'' and ''Varicella'' viruses, that the behaviour of chickenpox could be fully distinguished from smallpox. We now know that it is far more infectious than smallpox; that it can in fact be deadly, particularly so in a
virgin soil epidemic
Virgin soil epidemic is a term coined by Alfred Crosby, who defined it as epidemics "in which the populations at risk have had no previous contact with the diseases that strike them and are therefore immunologically almost defenseless." His conc ...
(a term only introduced to medicine in 1976); and that it is more dangerous to adults than to children (the converse of smallpox). By contrast, smallpox, which spreads mainly by “respiratory droplets”, is most commonly transmitted after moderately prolonged close contact, usually indoors. We also know, since 1888, that the chickenpox virus remains permanently in the body, and may break out again in times of stress or malnutrition as “
shingles
Shingles, also known as zoster or herpes zoster, is a viral disease characterized by a painful skin rash with blisters in a localized area. Typically the rash occurs in a single, wide mark either on the left or right side of the body or face. ...
,” with infectious pustules. There is therefore no difficulty in explaining how this virus reached the colony, since virtually every adult colonist unknowingly carried it.
However, 20th century virology also complicated the picture by introducing a distinction between two types of “true” smallpox. ''Variola major'', the more common and more deadly variant, was now distinguished from ''Variola minor'', also known as
Alastrim. Alastrim was less severe and on average far less deadly, with death rates more like 1% -- i.e. up to 30 times lower than ''Variola major''’s 25%-30% mortality. Prior to the electron microscope, there was debate as to whether alastrim should be called “smallpox” and whether it belonged in the genus ''Variola''. Thus J. H. L. Cumpston and F. McCallum in their 1923 ''The History of Smallpox in Australia 1909-1923'' noted that there was now a worldwide debate about “an exceptionally benign form of the disease”, and that in this debate “the unicists desire to see in alastrim merely an expression of variola;
utthe dualists persist in believing it a species sui generis, autonomous and independent.” The fact that these two viruses proved eventually to be closely related, plus the fact that infection with one was believed to confer lifelong immunity to the other, caused both in time to be classed as ''Variola'' and called smallpox.
However, the possibility that ''Variola minor'' might have much less severe effects upon a “virgin soil” population than chickenpox (''Varicella zoster''), adds to the difficulty of interpreting historical accounts. If, for instance, the deadly 1789 epidemic is believed to be ''Variola major'', then there is some possibility that the less deadly 1830-31 epidemic of “aggravated” ''Varicella'' (as diagnosed by the surgeon George Busby in 1831) might be neither chickenpox nor a continuation of the 1789 epidemic, but an unrelated outbreak of ''Variola minor''.
Carmody has suggested that Governor
Arthur Phillip
Admiral Arthur Phillip (11 October 1738 – 31 August 1814) was a British Royal Navy officer who served as the first governor of the Colony of New South Wales.
Phillip was educated at Greenwich Hospital School from June 1751 unti ...
’s use of the word “smallpox” rather than “chickenpox” might simply mean that he recognised the 1789 outbreak as virulent. On the other hand, as early as 1767 the British physician
William Heberden
William Heberden FRS (13 August 171017 May 1801) was an English physician.
Life
He was born in London, where he received the early part of his education at St Saviour's Grammar School. Full text at Internet Archive (archive.org) At the end of ...
presented a learned paper ''On the Chickenpox'' to the Royal College of Physicians of London. In this he argued that smallpox and chickenpox were separate syndromes, and that to have recovered from one did not give immunity to the other. Yet, despite the fact of separate immunities, doctors for some time found it difficult to distinguish chickenpox cases from milder attacks (or possibly mild recurrences) of smallpox. (Modern medical opinion, however, is that smallpox does not recur.)
Heberden’s view eventually prevailed, and was cautiously endorsed by
David Craigie in 1836 in his influential ''Elements of the practice of physic''. Even so, Craigie noted chickenpox’s close resemblance to small-pox, “with which it was always considered as allied, to which it probably bears an intimate relation, and with which it has been often confounded.” It is not known if the 1789 surgeons (who were not university-trained physicians but had qualified via an apprenticeship) had read Heberden’s paper or what they thought of it; but four decades later, during the 1830-31 outbreak there was (as described below) a vigorous debate between the colony’s surgeons on their diagnoses.
1831 Mair-Busby debate: chickenpox versus smallpox
In 1831 the Governor sent John Mair, a talented young regimental surgeon, to the Bathurst region to investigate the 1830-1831 epidemic. Mair sent back the alarming news that it was almost certainly smallpox. Mair noted that the disease, "approached more nearly in its symptoms to the character of small-pox than any other disease with which we are acquainted", adding that the death rate varied "from one in three to one in five or six, but might have been less" if patients had had shelter and medical attention. (This is less than the 50% mortality that Phillip and Bennelong estimated for the 1789 outbreak.) Mair also remarked that vaccination seemed to control it, since "three blacks who had been successfully vaccinated, although equally exposed to the disease, escaped infection." (A consignment of cowpox serum, permitting true
vaccination
Vaccination is the administration of a vaccine to help the immune system develop immunity from a disease. Vaccines contain a microorganism or virus in a weakened, live or killed state, or proteins or toxins from the organism. In stimulating ...
, had been brought to Sydney in 1804, six years after Jenner’s successful experiment in 1796; and with official support it had been fairly widely distributed.)
However, George Busby, the surgeon in charge of the Bathurst hospital, contradicted Mair’s diagnosis. Busby, backed by the colony’s senior surgeon James Bowman, informed the Governor that the outbreak appeared to be chickenpox. Busby also reported that when he examined two Aboriginal men he was unsure of his diagnosis; but later, when he saw the full course of the disease while treating a European man, who had caught the disease from an Aboriginal housemate who died of it, he diagnosed chickenpox, or in his words:
Busby also remarked: Busby did not suspect a difference in immunity between Aborigines and Europeans. He attributed the higher Aboriginal deathrate to nomadic living conditions and inappropriate care.
Dr
J. H. L. Cumpston, in his 1914 ''The History of Small-Pox in Australia 1788–1908'' quoted Busby’s arguments at length, while appearing to discount them. Yet Cumpston remarked that a recurrent theme in his ''History'' ("the oft-repeated tale has to be told again") was the long debate in Australian medical journals between doctors who, like Busby, insisted that a case or an outbreak was severe chickenpox, not smallpox, versus the orthodox view that if the pox disease, on its own, was causing deaths then it must be smallpox—a view on which he cited
Richard Quain Richard Quain may refer to:
* Richard Quain (Irish physician) (1816–1898)
* Richard Quain (English surgeon) (1800–1887), English anatomist and surgeon
{{hndis, Quain, Richard ...
’s 1882 ''Dictionary of Medicine'': "no physician has recorded a fatal case of chicken-pox." Cumpston inclined towards the second view: "It is a matter of common knowledge that chicken-pox is very rarely fatal". Yet he immediately after cites statistics that in Victoria, between 1857 and 1910, 70 deaths were attributed to chickenpox, versus 27 to smallpox. He also comments that such frequent debates and confusions "make one wonder to what extent the officially reported outbreaks of small-pox represent the real incidence of the disease", and remarks that, with the exception of the cases described by Mair and Busby, "there is no definite record of the existence of small-pox amongst Europeans in New South Wales before
..1874."
Peter Dowling in his 2021 book ''Fatal Contact'' notes that the Governor and Council accepted Busby’s and Bowman’s advice. However Dowling dismisses Busby’s diagnosis, claiming that the European patient's symptoms were those to be expected in a recurrence of smallpox ("a secondary bout of infection with smallpox virus", something which Dowling claims is possible when the earlier infection was ''Variola minor'' not ''Variola major''). He indexes his account under "Busby, George (Dr)... chickenpox, misdiagnosis of".
Dowling mentions that the outbreak killed two Europeans in families that had taken in sick Aborigines. Also that Mair noted that the 1831 outbreak was more dangerous to adults, being "chiefly fatal to adults and old people, seldom to children", --a pattern that modern medical authorities describe as typical of chickenpox outbreaks, but not of smallpox.
1985 Fenner-Hingston debate
One hundred and fifty-four years later, in February 1985, there was a simultaneous exchange of letters in the ''Medical Journal of Australia''. Professor
Frank Fenner
Frank John Fenner (21 December 1914 – 22 November 2010) was an Australian scientist with a distinguished career in the field of virology. His two greatest achievements are cited as overseeing the eradication of smallpox, and the attempted con ...
had contributed an article on the eradication of smallpox. Richard Hingston, a doctor who had faced a deadly epidemic of chickenpox in rural Papua, with symptoms “clinically akin to smallpox”, praised the article; but he took Fenner to task for implying that the 1789 outbreak had been smallpox:
Fenner, in his reply, conceded that Hingston had a point: “Chicken-pox is a possible alternative diagnosis for the 1789 epidemic among the Aborigines of eastern Australia… but I favour the more widespread opinion that the disease was smallpox”. He also conceded, as noted above, that “We can never be sure whether the 1789 outbreak was due to smallpox or chickenpox.” However, Fenner offered a group of arguments that he believed, collectively if not individually, justified his favouring the smallpox theory.
One involves evidence that the 1789 and the 1830–1831 epidemics were the same disease. Fenner cited Mair's report that the 1830-1831 outbreak was smallpox, and linked this to Mair's strong suspicion that Aborigines with scarring from a much older epidemic (perhaps, Fenner suggested, the 1789 one) might now be immune. However, later research by Dowling (notably, a strong proponent of the smallpox theory) appears to weaken this argument. Dowling found that Mair arrived too late to observe any active cases of the disease. Moreover, as mentioned above, the local surgeon, George Busby, disagreed and diagnosed chickenpox.
Dowling also recognises the importance of Lieutenant Governor
David Collins David Collins may refer to:
Persons
* David Collins (Hampshire cricketer), 18th-century cricketer
* David Collins (New Zealand cricketer) (1887–1967)
* David Collins (Scottish footballer) (1912–?)
* David Collins (Australian footballer) ( ...
's memoir, and cites passages from it that may tell against two of Fenner's other suggestions: that there was not a sufficient concentration of children in the colony to sustain a chickenpox outbreak, and that there was not sufficient contact with Aborigines for the colonists to have caught smallpox from them. However, the children Collins mentions as visiting sick Aborigines in 1789 without catching the disease would have been born in the UK, and many may have been already immune to chickenpox.
Fenner also argued that the frequent reports of scarring on survivors suggested smallpox. He recognised the importance of "hygiene" in preventing contamination of the open pustules of either disease, but said that even in more recent chickenpox plagues among Somali nomads (whose hygiene state he estimated was probably "similar to that of the Aborigines in 1789") serious scarring after chicken-pox was very rare: 2.4% of cases were seen one year after the attack, compared with 85% from smallpox. However, when Christopher Warren used a variant of this argument on ''Ockham’s Razor'' in April 2014, Carmody argued in reply that the severity of the virus attack could not be retrospectively deduced from the degree of scarring, "in part because there would have been a great deal of bacterial infection of the skin lesions, which would have worsened the scarring."
The debate in the medical journal in 1985 was not pursued. Fenner's "favouring" of the smallpox theory was useful to its proponents, but was weakened by his explicit statements that chickenpox could not be ruled out.
However, some smallpox proponents have represented this debate as a crushing defeat for the chickenpox theory. Christopher Warren has stated, for instance, "The chickenpox story is an old theory that has been dealt with. It was floated by Richard Hingston in the Australian Medical Journal in 1985 and was immediately rebutted by a leading virologist, Professor Frank Fenner." Warren has also claimed that Fenner's 1985 argument about Mair is conclusive. In 2021 when Carmody criticized a reviewer for assuming the 1789 epidemic was smallpox, she responded: "Richard Hingston floated the chickenpox theory in 1985, but this was rebutted by virologist Frank Fenner."
Dowling, in his 1997
ANU
Anu ( akk, , from wikt:𒀭#Sumerian, 𒀭 ''an'' “Sky”, “Heaven”) or Anum, originally An ( sux, ), was the sky father, divine personification of the sky, king of the gods, and ancestor of many of the list of Mesopotamian deities, dei ...
PhD thesis ''"A Great Deal of Sickness"'' offered a new version of Fenner’s remark that the scanty data mean that “we can never be sure” which disease it was. Dowling stated, “The little evidence we have pertaining to the 1789 epidemic in the Sydney region has left some historians and medical writers (Crosby 1986; Cumpston 1914; Curson 1985; Hingston 1985: 278) with doubts as to whether it was smallpox.” Twenty-eight years later, in the chapter on smallpox in his 2021 book ''Fatal Contact'', Dowling more firmly rejected the chickenpox theory. He again expressed admiration for Fenner, and implied that his own views are similar to Fenner's. In a brief section called "Disproving the doubters", Dowling does not describe the arguments or mention the names of Cumpston, Curson, Hingston, Carmody, Ford, Wright and others who have advanced the chickenpox theory; but he does offer a series of arguments against chickenpox. These are very similar to the arguments Fenner used in his debate with Hingston, but with significant expansion of some points, notably the argument about scarring.
Chickenpox theory
Cumpston in his 1914 ''History'' cites many medical discussions of the once-common term “native pock”. It seems to have meant different things to different users, but sometimes sounds like Busby’s “aggravated” varicella. For instance he cites an unnamed doctor observing in a medical journal in 1846:
The first clear statement that at least one of the major outbreaks was chickenpox, may be Busby’s in 1831. Cumpston shows that thereafter for some decades both Busby and Mair had their supporters in medical journals.
Moodie in 1973 argued that since the 1789 outbreak spared Europeans, it may have been a particularly virulent form of chickenpox.
In the 1980s increasing awareness of the issue of immunologically "naïve" populations led to a re-emergence of the chickenpox theory, put forward tentatively by Peter Curson in 1983, then more confidently by Hingston (1985), and Barry Wright (1987).
For the next 20 years the chickenpox theory was less often mentioned. However, in 2010
John Carmody, a professor of medicine, vigorously re-asserted it on
Robyn Williams
Robyn Williams (born 30 January 1944) is a British/Australian science journalist and broadcaster who has hosted ''The Science Show'' on ABC Radio National (RN) since 1975, and created ''Ockham's Razor'' in 1984.
Early life and education
W ...
's ''Ockham’s Razor'' program on
ABC Radio National
Radio National, known on-air as RN, is an Australia-wide public service broadcasting radio network run by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). From 1947 until 1985, the network was known as ABC Radio 2.
History
1937: Predecessors an ...
. Carmody claimed that the 1789 epidemic could not have been smallpox and was almost certainly
chickenpox
Chickenpox, also known as varicella, is a highly contagious disease caused by the initial infection with varicella zoster virus (VZV). The disease results in a characteristic skin rash that forms small, itchy blisters, which eventually scab ...
. He argued that smallpox, being much less infectious than chickenpox, could not have spread so rapidly from tribe to tribe around Sydney (nor from
Arnhem Land
Arnhem Land is a historical region of the Northern Territory of Australia, with the term still in use. It is located in the north-eastern corner of the territory and is around from the territory capital, Darwin. In 1623, Dutch East India Compan ...
to the Sydney region); but if present would certainly have infected some of the European colonists: "If it had really been smallpox, I would have expected about 50 cases amongst the colonists". Carmody said that this would have produced several recorded deaths, since smallpox has about a 30% fatality rate. However, he said, the only non-Aboriginal person reported to have died in this outbreak was a seaman called Joseph Jeffries, who was recorded as being "a North American Indian". Carmody also remarked that if the virus had been smallpox and derived from the surgeons’ inoculation jars, it would have “had to endure three summers before that 1789 outbreak”.
Carmody noted that chickenpox can take a severe toll on populations with little hereditary or acquired immunological resistance, and that it was certainly present in the colony. With regard to how smallpox could have reached the colony, Carmody later said: "There is absolutely no evidence to support any of the theories and some of them are fanciful and far-fetched." In response, Christopher Warren rejected suggestions that chickenpox caused the 1789 epidemic, and that it was fanciful to think that smallpox virus could have survived so long in dried scab. Warren in 2008 had already suggested that Campbell had erred in assuming that high temperatures would have sterilised the British supply of smallpox. However
H. A. Willis
H.A. Willis, (born Howard Alan Willis on 15 November 1948), is an Australian essayist, novelist, critic and editor.
Early life
The son of a Lands Department inspector in Victoria, Willis was born at Colac and grew up at Apollo Bay, Kyneton an ...
(2010), in a survey of the literature discussed above, endorsed Campbell's argument.
In response, Warren (2011) suggested that Willis had not taken into account research on how heat affects the smallpox virus, cited by the
WHO. Willis (2011) replied that his position was supported by a closer reading of Frank Fenner’s report to the WHO (1988) and invited readers to consult that report online.
Carmody's argument on the ''Science Show'' was not, for some time, followed by a scholarly paper, and was ignored by many historians. However, another medical researcher working on diseases among Aborigines in the early colonial era (this time not on the Eora but on adjacent groups to the North West), G. E. Ford, stated in late 2010 that he had previously and independently reached Carmody's conclusions: "In a project applying a specialist understanding of disease and epidemiology from my own previous professional life as a pathobiologist, I had verified that the small pox was not Smallpox but was Chicken Pox brought to the colony in a latent form later known as
Shingles
Shingles, also known as zoster or herpes zoster, is a viral disease characterized by a painful skin rash with blisters in a localized area. Typically the rash occurs in a single, wide mark either on the left or right side of the body or face. ...
". Ford also said that he had "identified a likely convict carrier and the means by which the chicken pox infection spread through the population".
However Ford concedes that neither he nor Carmody can claim priority for this theory since:
"In 1985 a teacher of 'medical geography', Peter Curson of
Macquarie University
Macquarie University ( ) is a public research university based in Sydney, Australia, in the suburb of Macquarie Park. Founded in 1964 by the New South Wales Government, it was the third university to be established in the metropolitan area of S ...
presented a good case on historic evidence that the disease was chickenpox.” Ford added that at a conference in 1987, the archaeologist Barry Wright presented similar arguments and conclusion. To maintain coherence with earlier historical accounts, Ford refers to "the small pox epidemic" of 1789–1791, but makes two words of "small pox" and reminds the reader that he believes the "small pox" in question was "Chicken Pox, a small pox other than Smallpox".
In a conference paper in February 2014 on historic Aboriginal demography, the Australian National University's Boyd Hunter joined with Carmody to argue that the recorded behaviour of the 1789 epidemic rules out smallpox and indicates chickenpox. In 2021 Carmody summarized the case against smallpox:
Yet, despite Ford’s and even Fenner’s agreement that chickenpox must eventually have entered the colony via shingles and was then very likely to spread fast and prove fatal to Aborigines, there is no hard evidence that it had in fact appeared by April 1789. (The surviving part of Chief Surgeon John White’s journal suggests that it had not been noticed by November 1788)..
There is also some contradiction between Hingston’s scenario, in which the surgeons recognised and ignored childhood chickenpox as unimportant, and Carmody’s. Carmody doubts that the surgeons in 1789 believed there was a distinction between the two diseases, but implies they may not have noted a child or children who carried an infection of chickenpox, from an adult with shingles, to Aboriginal children with whom they played. No surviving records have been produced that mention “smallpox” inside the colony, even though Tench and others were puzzling over how it reached the Aborigines.
Unresolved Issues in the Chickenpox Debate
However, the same difficulty in documenting the first appearance of chickenpox in Australia may also complicate the scenarios of those who are quite sure that the 1789 outbreak was chickenpox. Chickenpox, as Fenner and Hingston agreed, is a proven killer of "virgin soil" populations, and none of the experts who favour smallpox has yet argued that Aborigines had immunity to chickenpox. If the spike in Aboriginal deaths in 1789 cannot be attributed to the arrival of chickenpox, then chickenpox's initial impact upon Aboriginal populations remains to be documented. Colin Tatz in his ''Genocide in Australia: By Accident or Design?'' puts chickenpox ahead of smallpox, at the head of a list of major “settler-introduced diseases”, but does not provide details.
Yet Fenner, in his 1985 debate with Hingston, gives reasons to doubt that chickenpox in 1789-1790 could have produced the rates of death or of scarring that the records suggest. The common Aboriginal custom of living naked and sometimes sleeping naked on bare earth around their campfires is well documented, and might well have worsened the scarring, as Carmody suggests, via bacterial contamination of open pustules. Yet Fenner’s striking statistic about a lethal epidemic of chickenpox producing only a 2.4% rate of serious scarring among its survivors seems a potential problem for the chickenpox explanation of the 1789 epidemic.
Governor Phillip’s rough estimate of a 50% death-rate is far more like that of smallpox than of chickenpox, though unusually high for either disease. Carmody and Hunter cite "a very severe epidemic" of chickenpox in the French Cameroons in 1936 that killed 19.3% of clinical cases, i.e. of cases that received some clinical treatment; and they themselves estimate a likely death-rate among Aborigines in 1789 of some 30%. This, they recognise, is still "substantially lower than most of the smallpox based assumptions in Butlin's research". They argue, however, that other co-morbidities may have meant that Aborigines were really suffering "multiple epidemics", for which the pox disease with its spectacular eruptions took the whole blame. The Aboriginal public health exper
Dr Mark Wenitonghas rejected such arguments, telling the ABC in 2021:"It looked like smallpox and acted like smallpox and the outcomes were high mortality rates like smallpox."
The speed with which the 1789 disease spread does not necessarily prove it was chickenpox, since unknown cultural factors or behaviours might have aided it; and Dowling says that it was common for smallpox to become highly transmissible "in a virgin soil population". Very little or nothing is known about how much the behaviour of either disease may have changed in a truly “virgin soil” Aboriginal population in 1789. The failure to infect and kill Europeans remains the clearest argument that it was not smallpox.
Some proponents of the smallpox theory, however, invert this argument, claiming that smallpox failed to infect Europeans precisely because they were already immune to it. Carmody and Hunter (2014) agree that those colonists who had suffered smallpox were now immune; but they argue that smallpox’s epidemic behaviour in Britain, with its "impressively constant" rates of infection and death, proves the population as a whole was far from immune. They calculate that about half of the colonists, including almost all the younger children, were vulnerable. Dowling concedes that many of the roughly one thousand colonists would not have been immune to smallpox, including especially the children. However, he doubts that there was sufficient contact with Aborigines.
To accept the 1789 "smallpox epidemic" as the work of chickenpox would involve a large-scale re-evaluation of the history of such epidemics. All supposed epidemics of “smallpox” recorded before 1800—especially if they moved rapidly, and if they affected previously unexposed populations—might be suspected of being the more infectious chickenpox. The whole history and epidemiology of smallpox in the Americas might need to be re-examined. In Australia too there would be new matters to research. For instance, Carmody and Hunter remark that it is "reasonable to assume that chickenpox then
.e. after 1789spread relatively quickly across the continent from Port Jackson
ydneybecause it has a very high infection rate."
In Europe and Asia many long-running debates about the identity of past plagues, such as the
Black Death
The Black Death (also known as the Pestilence, the Great Mortality or the Plague) was a bubonic plague pandemic occurring in Western Eurasia and North Africa from 1346 to 1353. It is the most fatal pandemic recorded in human history, causi ...
, have supposedly been solved in the twenty-first century by DNA evidence. To date, no DNA evidence has been offered on the 1789 epidemic.
Deliberate release theories, 1789
Though the
First Fleet
The First Fleet was a fleet of 11 ships that brought the first European and African settlers to Australia. It was made up of two Royal Navy vessels, three store ships and six convict transports. On 13 May 1787 the fleet under the command ...
itself did not arrive with any known carriers of the disease, the observation of an epidemic some 16 months after the colony was established has led to speculation that the Fleet itself brought this disease to Australia. The surgeons carried sealed samples of dried smallpox scabs for use in
variolation; and some historians have suggested that the disease was later released from the surgeons’ medical stores, either by accident (perhaps via theft), or deliberately.
Variolation, a form of
inoculation
Inoculation is the act of implanting a pathogen or other microorganism. It may refer to methods of artificially inducing immunity against various infectious diseases, or it may be used to describe the spreading of disease, as in "self-inoculati ...
with dried smallpox scab, was a well-recognised medical practice, up till and even after the process of
smallpox vaccination (with cowpox) was successfully demonstrated by
Edward Jenner in 1796. Variolation was a risky procedure, since recipients sometimes died of the resulting infection, or spread it to others; yet during severe epidemics it seems to have provided significant protection, perhaps because the patient received only a small infection from the dried scab, and was thereafter immune. Dried smallpox scab was thus commonly stored in glass containers as part of a surgeon's remedies. Successful variolation produced a single localised mark called a papule at the site of infection, so surgeons would normally know if their scab-samples were still valid.
There is no record of the surgeons using this material. No
First Fleet
The First Fleet was a fleet of 11 ships that brought the first European and African settlers to Australia. It was made up of two Royal Navy vessels, three store ships and six convict transports. On 13 May 1787 the fleet under the command ...
ers had suffered from the disease on the voyage, and no cases had been recorded since. Hence, smallpox’s sudden existence among the Aboriginal people was a conundrum. As mentioned,
Watkin Tench noted that the marks on the bodies were “similar” to those produced by smallpox. Tench then speculated as to whether the disease might be indigenous to the country; or whether it had been brought to the colony by the French expedition of
Lapérouse a year before; had traversed the continent from the West where Europeans had previously landed; been brought by the expedition of
James Cook
James Cook (7 November 1728 Old Style date: 27 October – 14 February 1779) was a British explorer, navigator, cartographer, and captain in the British Royal Navy, famous for his three voyages between 1768 and 1779 in the Pacific Ocean an ...
; or indeed had arrived with the first British settlers at Sydney. "Our surgeons brought out
variolous matter in bottles", he wrote, "but to infer that it was produced from this cause were a supposition so wild as to be unworthy of consideration."
However, Dowling finds evidence that by 1830, with the assistance of well-meaning settlers, many Aboriginal people seem to have been either vaccinated (with cowpox), or else ‘inoculated” (i.e.
variolated) — a method which would seem to have risked spreading either smallpox (''Variola major'' or ''Variola minor'') or its partial lookalike chickenpox.
In later years, most historians assumed that the 1789 epidemic was smallpox; and several of them speculated on means by which smallpox might have travelled from Indonesia via
Macassan
Makassar (, mak, ᨆᨀᨔᨑ, Mangkasara’, ) is the capital of the Indonesian province of South Sulawesi. It is the largest city in the region of Eastern Indonesia and the country's fifth-largest urban center after Jakarta, Surabaya, Medan ...
traders and thence overland to southern Australia. However in 1914 Dr
J. H. L. Cumpston, while not ruling out this possibility, nor the possibility that it was chickenpox, put forward a rival theory, that smallpox in some way reached NSW in 1789 via British settlers.
[Cumpston, JHL "The History of Small-Pox in Australia 1788–1908", Government Printer (1914) Melbourne.] He did not believe smallpox infections could have gone unnoticed, and so thought that the “variolous matter” mentioned by Watkin Tench “cannot be dismissed lightly as a possible source of the epidemic. It is at least as likely a theory as that of the introduction by the French sailors.” However Cumpston thought that “this question can never be settled unless some hitherto undiscovered records come to light”.
This theory was revived and expanded in 1983 when Professor
Noel Butlin
Noel Butlin AC (19 December 1921 - 2 April 1991) was a distinguished Australian economic historian, considered "one of the most outstanding Australian social scientists of his generation, and one of the major international figures in economic hi ...
, an economic historian, suggested: "it is possible and, in 1789, likely, that infection of the Aboriginal people was a deliberate extermination act". Butlin did not specify how the virus was released, but (having argued that the Macassan/overland theory was implausible) he suggested that the most likely explanation of smallpox’s appearance in 1789 was that it had been transferred somehow, by theft, accident, or the like, from scab originally stored in glass containers carried by just one of the seven medical officers on the first fleet.
Several historians thereafter mentioned this possibility, and debated if this was more plausible than overland transmission.
David Day (2001) reiterated Butlin's argument and suggested that members of Sydney's garrison of Royal Marines may have attempted to use smallpox as a biological weapon in 1789. The following year, however, John Connor stated that Day's theory was "unsustainable". Historian Henry Reynolds in 2001 repeated Butlin's claims and wrote: "one possibility is that the epidemic was deliberately or accidentally let loose by someone in the settlement at Sydney Cove.”
However revived arguments for overland transmission were put by Judy Campbell in her 2002 book ''Invisible Invaders'', and Macknight (1986 and 2011).
H. A. Willis
H.A. Willis, (born Howard Alan Willis on 15 November 1948), is an Australian essayist, novelist, critic and editor.
Early life
The son of a Lands Department inspector in Victoria, Willis was born at Colac and grew up at Apollo Bay, Kyneton an ...
complained in 2010 that Butlin’s supporters had ignored the fact that his study, “was confined to the period before 1850. Yet the 1860s epidemic shows that ''smallpox could and did travel overland'' from northern Australia.” There was also, in the 1980s, a re-emergence of the rival chickenpox theory.
The independent scholar Christopher Warren (2007, 2014) became a strong advocate of the view that smallpox was deliberately released from the surgeon’s inoculation jars as an act of germ warfare. This led him into complex debates with Fenner, Carmody, Willis and others as to whether these inoculation samples could have been protected from heat sufficiently to be still viable in April 1789. However, in 2014 he laid out a detailed argument that the colony in April 1789 was in an extremely weak military position versus the Aborigines, and speculated that the release of smallpox was a response to this by one or more of the colonists, perhaps without the Governor’s knowledge. Warren also cited a story from the Balmoral region of North Sydney, reported in 2001 by the Aboriginal academic Dennis Foley: “According to Foley, an Aboriginal oral tradition reported that, at Balmoral, there were blankets with red markings, a stripe of words or a crown and that those who took the blankets died a horrible death of fire under their skin and the pus of a thousand festering sores.” Warren suggests that concentrations of Aboriginal remains around Sydney “are consistent with a release of smallpox at Balmoral and at Botany Bay
outh of Sydneywith some natives dying as they fled north and south.” In 2021 Warren claimed that “the British had no other option than to use smallpox against local Aborigines in 1789 because they had no ammunition for their muskets
����.
While acknowledging Carmody's and Ford's argument that chickenpox was present on the First Fleet and would have become infectious via shingles, Warren argued in his 2014 article that it was suspicious that in April 1789 a smallpox epidemic "was reported amongst the
Port Jackson
Port Jackson, consisting of the waters of Sydney Harbour, Middle Harbour, North Harbour and the Lane Cove and Parramatta Rivers, is the ria or natural harbour of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The harbour is an inlet of the Tasman Sea (p ...
Aboriginal tribes who were actively resisting settlers from the First Fleet". When the ''Ockham’s Razor'' radio program for 13 April 2014 invited Warren to re-state these arguments, Carmody responded briefly on the same program, claiming that there was in fact "no hard medical evidence" that the 1789 outbreak was smallpox, and said that the surgeons’ inoculation samples would have been inert by April 1789.
Deliberate release --analogies with North America
However, Warren and others argue that the British had already used smallpox in just this way in North America:
In June 1763, during
Pontiac's War
Pontiac's War (also known as Pontiac's Conspiracy or Pontiac's Rebellion) was launched in 1763 by a loose confederation of Native Americans dissatisfied with British rule in the Great Lakes region following the French and Indian War (1754–176 ...
,
Colonel Henry Bouquet ordered
smallpox blanket
The siege of Fort Pitt took place during June and July 1763 in what is now the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. The siege was a part of Pontiac's War, an effort by Native Americans in the United States, Native Americans to remov ...
s to be distributed to a
Delaware
Delaware ( ) is a state in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States, bordering Maryland to its south and west; Pennsylvania to its north; and New Jersey and the Atlantic Ocean to its east. The state takes its name from the adjacent Del ...
delegation when they
laid siege to
Fort Pitt. Yet A. R. Rao’s careful researches in the 1960s found little truth in the traditional belief that smallpox can be spread at a distance through infected clothing or bedding; and there is independent evidence that Bouquet's attempt, even with very fresh material from the smallpox epidemic inside their own fort, was unsuccessful.
The analogy with the Sydney colony is not perfect, in that smallpox had long been a scourge in North America, whereas in Australia the British would have been infecting their new territory with a deadly disease from which it (and its new colonists) had been free.
Henry Reynolds commented in 2001: “Not surprisingly this is a highly contentious proposition. If true, it would clearly fall within the ambit of the
Genocide Convention
The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (CPPCG), or the Genocide Convention, is an international treaty that criminalizes genocide and obligates state parties to pursue the enforcement of its prohibition. It was ...
". Seth Carus of the
National Defense University in the US wrote in 2015 that: "Ultimately, we have a strong circumstantial case supporting the theory that someone deliberately introduced smallpox in the Aboriginal population". However, Colin Tatz in his 2011 ''Genocide in Australia: By Accident or Design?'' rejects as absurd the notion that the British would have deliberately released in Australia a disease that they had so much reason to fear.
Several historians, while sticking with the traditional diagnosis of smallpox, have remained non-committal about how it reached the Sydney region in 1789. In 2020 Professor
Henry Reynolds told the ABC that just how smallpox could have got to Sydney remained and might always remain "a real mystery". Also, in August 2021, the historian Cassandra Pybus, in a review of Peter Dowling’s 2021 book ''Fatal Contact: How Epidemics Nearly Wiped Out Australia’s First People'', rejected the suggestion that smallpox was deliberately released from the surgeons' "variolous matter" as "very circumstantial", drew attention to "David Collins' observation that the only non-Indigenous person to be affected by the disease was a Native American", and suggested that if the disease was smallpox "it was more likely to have come from the American whalers who came to and went from Sydney Cove prior to and during 1788–1789. No one really knows." Dowling, who does not propose the whaler idea, is not satisfied with any explanation of how smallpox first reached the Sydney region, writing in 2021 that: "no one author or theory has in the end prevailed over the others. The question of the origin of the 1789 smallpox epidemic among the Australian Aboriginal people has remained unresolved."
History Wars as an influence on the debate
The
History Wars in Australia involve moralized or politicized debates about injustices that the Aborigines suffered from European settlers. It is likely that the History Wars have influenced discussions or investigations of smallpox in the colonial era.
The fact that the three main smallpox outbreaks afflicted Aborigines rather than settlers has not been proved to be due to anyone’s deliberate or malicious action. Yet it seems to some Aborigines symbolic of the many injustices and disadvantages that they have suffered, and (in the view of Dr Mark Wenitong) potentially suspicious.
Some Aborigines, and their supporters, have implied that they feel the pattern of Australian history will be incomplete until evidence can be found that the smallpox outbreaks were in some way a deliberate plot introduced by British colonists.
Conversely, some proponents of the Macassan or chickenpox theories imply that they see social value or historical justice in ruling out conspiracy theories. Judy Campbell, for instance, wrote in her book ''Invisible Invaders'' that she hoped to assist reconciliation by answering an Aboriginal protestor who claimed, “You gave us smallpox”. Professor Carmody told a journalist in 2013 that a further reason for doubting that the 1789 plague was smallpox released by the surgeons was that he had read their surviving records and, “They all struck me as being of really ethical character and I simply can't believe any of them would do that.”
Chickenpox blamed for Aboriginal deaths
by Tom McIlroy, ''The Canberra Times'', 8 August 2013 .
What is not in doubt is that the early “smallpox” epidemics caused immense injury to Aborigines, and had major effects upon the balance of power between themselves and the colonists. Each of the three best-substantiated theories about the epidemics may provoke different, yet significant, moral criticisms of the behaviour of the settlers. For instance, if the Macassan theory were proved to be true, and it was Makassars, not Europeans, who brought smallpox to Australia, it would still be true that it was settlers and squatters
Squatting is the action of occupying an abandoned or unoccupied area of land or a building, usually residential, that the squatter does not own, rent or otherwise have lawful permission to use. The United Nations estimated in 2003 that there ...
from Europe who took advantage of smallpox (and other new diseases) to take over Aboriginal lands. However, if it could be proved that British colonial settlement was facilitated in 1789 by a conscious act of germ warfare, the morality and legitimacy of the colonisation of Australia would be more severely questioned.
Notes
References
Sources
*
* {{cite book , last1=Dowling , first1=Peter , title=Fatal contact: How epidemics nearly wiped out Australia's first peoples , date=2021 , publisher=Monash University Publishing , location=Clayton, Victoria , isbn=9781922464460
External links
Mark Wenitong at ANU
Expert on Aboriginal health
History of Indigenous Australians