Abstract
Boston's 1721 smallpox epidemic impoverished many, especially those already on the margins. More surprisingly, the epidemic also was a financial boon to the hundreds employed in Boston's “death economy.” Using court records, probate records, and more, this article argues that precarity and prosperity were intertwined in early modern seaports.
© 2025 by The New England Quarterly
2025
The New England Quarterly
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