The Nasty Politics of Public Health: The Quarantine Station in Astoria and Knappton Cove 1900-1906 - Paperback
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by Friedrich E. Schuler (Author)
The struggle over maritime public health in the Pacific Northwest pitted the U.S. federal government against the State of Oregon, with figures such as Dr. Baylis Earle of the Knappton Cove Quarantine Station, Governor George Chamberlain, reform politician Oswald West, and the influential Fulton brothers at the center of the conflict. Their clashes unfolded against the backdrop of Astoria's sharply divided social world, where elite leisure culture coexisted with working-class saloons, and where partisan battles shaped nearly every aspect of civic life. In this charged environment, the port's economy-anchored in salmon canneries, lumber exports, and constant maritime traffic-made control of quarantine authority a high-stakes political prize. Dr. Earle transformed the local U.S. Public Health Service station into a consequential force in this contest, turning what had been a modest federal outpost into a key player in Oregon's fight over jurisdiction, public health, and political power.