Population
| Diseases | Medicine
| Tradesmen
The Arts | Crime
& Punishment | Alcohol
| Military
Headline News of 1804
Population
In 1804 the United States
was growing rapidly in population as well as territory. The 1800
census indicated that the nation was composed of about 5.3 million
people. The 17 states in the Union in 1804 were Georgia, South
Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Maryland,
Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Massachusetts,
Connecticut, Vermont, New Hampshire and newly-admitted Ohio. The
flag had 15 stars and 15 stripes, and wasn't changed until 1818,
despite the fact that several more states entered the Union. After
1818 the flag went back to having just thirteen stripes, representing
the thirteen original states.
The U.S. was then a predominantly
rural nation, with only 1 in 20 of its citizens living in towns
of over 2,500 people; four of every five were farmers. All were
used to hard work, with long days (14-16 hours in the summer)
and seasonal changes in labor and diet. Work began for children
at an early age, with little time for schooling. The average household
was composed of six people, but many families were very large,
exceeding ten children. Most lived in small, one story houses,
many with just one or two rooms.
The average age of Americans at the time of Lewis and Clark was
young, probably about 16 years of age in 1800; today it is about
34. The average height of Americans was about 5'8" tall,
belying the old maxim of historic site docents who delighted in
telling the public how "people were shorter in those days."
The average height of Americans in the early 21st century is about
5'9". However, in 1800 Americans were taller than their European
counterparts by about 2 to 3 inches. Heights in the army in 1804
ranged between 5'5" and 6'4½".
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Diseases
Although the average age at death was lower than today, that did
not mean that people died younger. The statistics of the average
age at death were younger because of a great deal of infant mortality,
caused by contageous diseases like measles, whooping cough, scarlet
fever, pneumonia, polio, smallpox, yellow fever, malaria, typhiod
fever, tuberculosis and other maladies which have since been controlled
by vaccines and inoculations. If a person lived to their 20s they
were just about as likely to reach 70 or even 80 as today's population.
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Medicine
Medicine and medical knowledge was primitive, with no internal
surgery being performed. Operations consisted of amputations of
limbs or trephanning, a procedure by which a hole was cut in the
skull to relieve pressure on the brain. Many doctors had no medical
training at all, and even the ones who had gone to a medical school
knew relatively little about what made a person sick or well.
Doctors in 1804 diagnosed by evaluating the individual symptoms
displayed by a patient rather than what those symptoms might mean
in combination. Doctors still felt that all disease was caused
by an imbalance of "bodily humors." The four "humors"
were blood, saliva, urine and feces. If a person was sick, it
was likely (according to this theory) that their body had produced
too much of one of the bodily humors. This is why doctors resorted
to bleeding their patients - that is, actually opening up a vein
on a person's arm with a razor-sharp instrument and taking a measured
amount of blood before bandaging the wound. Doctors at the time
believed there was more blood in the human body than there really
is - in fact, they believed that there was twice as much blood
in each person. Needless to say, taking blood from a person fighting
an infection is not helpful; taking copious amounts of blood will
eventually kill the patient. Often people who had simple maladies
were killed by doctors who drained them of too much blood.
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Tradesmen
In addition to professional men like merchants, ship owners, teachers,
professors, clergymen, lawyers and doctors, the majority of United
States citizens were laboring men and women. The era's jobs included
farmer, tailor, shoemaker, coppersmith, hatter, blacksmith, carpenter,
cooper, tobacconist, gardener, miller, printer, clothier, musician,
distiller, harnessmaker, cordwainer, sadler, barber, weaver, tanner,
currier, chairmaker, cabinetmaker, hosier, baker and laborer.
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The Arts
There were very few people in the United States involved in the
arts in 1804. There were a few theaters in the largest cities.
A small number of famous painters, like Gilbert Stuart, Charles
Willson Peale and John Vanderlyn had emerged, and itinerant artists
roamed the countryside, ready to paint portraits and tavern signs
in a primitive style. No authors or poets of any note had yet
appeared, save Thomas Paine, Thomas Jefferson and other writers
on American liberties, and a young African American poet from
Boston named Phillis Wheatley. However, true artistry was being
produced in the beautiful furniture and silver work of the period
in such cities as Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and
Charleston.
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Crime & Punishment
Life in the early 19th century could be brutal. This was underscored
by the public's fascination with hangings, bear-baitings, cockfights,
and gouging contests - in which men purposely grew their fingernails
long so that they could gouge out their opponent's eyes. It is
certain that the Marquis of Queensbury's rules were not observed
in popular bare-knuckle fistfights held throughout the country.
For the upper classes, a verbal slight or insult could end in
a duel and death. Being arrested or convicted of a crime could
land one in a prison, many of which were set up in old mines and
decrepit buildings. Damp conditions, vermin and contagious inmates
created shocking conditions and often led to death. Many were
imprisoned and endured such conditions merely because they were
in debt or mentally impaired. At the turn of the 19th century
people were ordinarily executed only for murder, but minor crimes
such as forgery resulted in having one's ears cropped. Branding
on the forehead with letters (such as "M" for manslaughter)
was practiced in New England, along with public whippings for
petty theft. It was at the time of Lewis and Clark, in fact, that
statute law was changing throughout America to eliminate such
"cruel and unusual punishments," replacing public tortures
with incarceration. Pennsylvania abolished flogging in 1790, Massachusetts
outlawed mutilation in 1805, and Connecticut's last public whipping
was in 1828.
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Alcohol
Drinking hard liquor was part of the way of ordinary life during
the period of Lewis and Clark. The yearly consumption of liquor
at the time of the American Revolution, reported Jack Larkin,
Chief Historian of Old Sturbridge Village, "has been estimated
at the equivalent of three and one-half gallons of pure two-hundred-proof
alcohol for each person. After 1790 American men began to drink
even more. By the late 1820s their imbibing had risen to an all-time
high of almost four gallons per capita."
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Military
The entire strength of the U.S. Army in 1804 totaled just 3,220
officers and men - in a nation of over 5.3 million people. In
case of imminent danger, the responsibility for the defense of
the nation was placed upon militia organizations rather than the
regular army.
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Headline
News of 1804
Thomas
Jefferson Reelected for a Second Term as President
The Supreme Court Renders
an Important Decision
Aaron Burr Kills Alexander
Hamilton in a Duel
The United States
Takes Possession of the Louisiana Territory
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