I'm reading a short book about mortality rates, and came across this, for Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in 1802.
Portsmouth at the time had circa 5600 people, and so 152 deaths in that single year is, uh, high.
Aphtha 2
I have no idea what "Aphtha" is, but as it claimed the lives of a 4-month-old and a 4-year-old, it must have been a childhood disease.
Apoplexy 5
The ages of death were 33, 43, 55, 63, and 66 years; I have no idea what the modern variation of "Apoplexy" is, but sincerely encourage all primitives with anger issues to be on guard against it.
Atrophy 6
The ages of death were 3 months, 40, 55, 55, 60, 69 years.
The table of mortality does not say what atrophied.
Cancer 3
The ages of death were 55, 60, 63 years, but remember 206 years ago, what was called "cancer" is not the same thing we call cancer today.
Cankerrash 8
I have no idea; ages of death were 7 months, 2, 2, 4, 5, 8, 16, 23 years.
Cholera of infants 13
All ages between 6 and 24 months, nearly all during the summer months.
Cholic billious 1
Age of death 42 years, and there's lots of primitives who should be careful about this.
Consumption 28
This was the leading cause of death; one assumes "tuberculosis" is its modern name.
Age of death from between 14 years up to 69 years, spanning all groups pretty much evenly.
Debauchery 2
Ages of death 38, 55 years. This is another one of those things the primitives should watch out for, especially since this is a cause of death that has increased, not decreased, since 1802.
Dropsy 6
Ages at death 24, 50, 52, 69, 84, 89 years.
Dropsy in the brain 5
Those died at the ages of 3, 7, 7, 8, 13 years, although it does seem to me such should be a gravely serious health risk for many primitives.
Dysentery 3
Ages at deceasement 2, 2, 3 years.
Epilepsy 3
Ages at succumbment 2, 2, 64 years; I'm not sure if this was the same thing as epilepsy is today.
Fever and Ague 1
Age at death 33 years. This could have been just about anything, including an ingrown toenail.
Fever billious 3
Ages at death 27, 30, 74 years.
Fever billious malignant 10
All ages between 13 and 40 years at time of death.
Fever pulmonic 2
Passed on at 45, 65 years, both in January, a wintry month.
Gout 1
Aged 52 years; this ranks perhaps highly among the debauched primitives.
Gravel 1
Aged 41 years; I have no idea what "Gravel" is, or was.
Hooping [sic] cough 8
Ten weeks to one year, most in January-February.
Infantile complaints 2
Six days old in one instance, 4 weeks old in the other.
This however is perhaps the leading cause of ailments for the primitives, infantile complaints.
Measles 11
Ages at demise ranged from 9 months to 20 years, most in May and June.
Mortification 2
Seven months old, and 1 year old. I have no idea what the modern name of this is.
Old age 4
Past the traditional threescore and ten; ages 76, 78, 90, and 94 years.
Palsy 4
This probably has a different name these days; ages at
rigor mortis 50, 60, 64, 74 years.
Phrenitis 2
Ages 12, 30 years.
Premature birth 6
No ages given, probably infants.
Quinsy 1
One 3-year-old; I have no idea what this is.
Scald head 1
One 1-year-old; I have no idea what "scald head" means, as surely it didn't mean what it sounds like.
Small pox, natural 1
One, at 33 years of age.
Small pox, innoculated 1
One, at 1 year of age.
Drowned 2
Sunk at the ages of 48 and 60 years, one in May and the other in December.
Fall 1
At the age of 55 years, fell.
Frozen 1
At the age of 82 years, froze in December.
Poisoned by opium 1
An infant, 4 months old.
Suicide 1
At the age of 32 years, in mid-winter.