(Lesley) Plague has taken over settlements throughout history, causing sickness and death to spread among the inhabitants. In 1665, one English town decided to stand against the resurging Plague. For 14 months, the Derbyshire town of Eyam self-isolated. No one was allowed in, no one as allowed out. Neighboring villages supported the isolated town by leaving supplies in a field. This week, Lesley discusses the consequences of their strategy.
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History for Halloween V
How to Make a Fortune in Fictional Poyais
The Legend of Pope Joan
Escape from Slavery: The Story of Mary and Emily Edmonson
Beyond the Trenches: Other Fronts of WWI
How to Avoid Serving in Napoleon's Army
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Special Edition: The Marriage of John Quincy and Louisa Adams
The Blazing World of Lady Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle
Yolande Du Bois and the Weight of W.E.B. Du Bois's Dreams
Ambition, Anxiety, and the Unseen Universe: Science and Victorian Fiction
Evacuating the Loyalists
Hoelun the Stolen Bride
The Papal Pornocracy
Censorship in Reformation England
Jewish Fighters of Medieval Europe
How to Be a Beguine
Back of Every Great Work: The Story of Emily Warren Roebling
Napoleon Bonaparte's Near-Fatal Christmas
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