We examine the rise and fall of the National Board of Health (NBH), which was a federal institution created in response to the yellow fever epidemic of 1878 to direct national disease policy. Historical accounts suggest a number of reasons why the NBH was not reauthorized in 1883, four years after it was created and granted significant quarantine authority. We examine these arguments through an analysis of roll-call voting in Congress. We find that the creation and empowerment of the NBH in 1879 is best seen as an emergency action. Republican members of Congress — and conservative members outside the South, more generally — were willing to put the country's interests ahead of their own for a time. But as relatively epidemic-free years followed, Republicans and more conservative members of Congress — conditional on the recency of their state being affected by yellow fever — were largely unwilling to maintain a federal entity with power to significantly affect commercial activity.
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11 March 2021
Research Article|
March 11 2021
Yellow Fever and Institutional Development: The Rise and Fall of the National Board of Health Available to Purchase
Thomas R. Gray;
Thomas R. Gray
School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences, University of Texas at Dallas
USA
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Jeffery A. Jenkins
Jeffery A. Jenkins
Price School of Public Policy, University of Southern California
USA
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Online ISSN: 2689-4823
Print ISSN: 2689-4815
© 2021 T. R. Gray and J. A. Jenkins
2021
T. R. Gray and J. A. Jenkins
Licensed re-use rights only
Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy (2021) 2 (1): 143–167.
Citation
Gray TR, Jenkins JA (2021), "Yellow Fever and Institutional Development: The Rise and Fall of the National Board of Health". Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy, Vol. 2 No. 1 pp. 143–167, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/113.00000033
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