ORDERS CONCEIVED AND PUBLISHED BY THE LORD MAYOR AND ALDERMEN OF THE
CITY OF LONDON CONCERNING THE INFECTION OF THE PLAGUE, 1665.
’WHEREAS in the reign of our
late Sovereign King James, of happy memory, an Act
was made for the charitable relief and ordering of
persons infected with the plague, whereby authority
was given to justices of the peace, mayors, bailiffs,
and other head-officers to appoint within their several
limits examiners, searchers, watchmen, keepers, and
buriers for the persons and places infected, and to
minister unto them oaths for the performance of their
offices. And the same statute did also authorise
the giving of other directions, as unto them for the
present necessity should seem good in their directions.
It is now, upon special consideration, thought very
expedient for preventing and avoiding of infection
of sickness (if it shall so please Almighty God) that
these officers following be appointed, and these orders
hereafter duly observed.
Examiners to be appointed in every Parish.
’First, it is thought requisite,
and so ordered, that in every parish there be one,
two, or more persons of good sort and credit chosen
and appointed by the alderman, his deputy, and common
council of every ward, by the name of examiners, to
continue in that office the space of two months at
least. And if any fit person so appointed shall
refuse to undertake the same, the said parties so
refusing to be committed to prison until they shall
conform themselves accordingly.
The Examiner’s Office.
’That these examiners he sworn
by the aldermen to inquire and learn from time to
time what houses in every parish be visited, and what
persons be sick, and of what diseases, as near as
they can inform themselves; and upon doubt in that
case, to command restraint of access until it appear
what the disease shall prove. And if they find
any person sick of the infection, to give order to
the constable that the house be shut up; and if the
constable shall be found remiss or negligent, to give
present notice thereof to the alderman of the ward.
Watchmen.
’That to every infected house
there be appointed two watchmen, one for every day,
and the other for the night; and that these watchmen
have a special care that no person go in or out of
such infected houses whereof they have the charge,
upon pain of severe punishment. And the said
watchmen to do such further offices as the sick house
shall need and require: and if the watchman be
sent upon any business, to lock up the house and take
the key with him; and the watchman by day to attend
until ten of the clock at night, and the watchman
by night until six in the morning.
Searchers.
’That there be a special care
to appoint women searchers in every parish, such as
are of honest reputation, and of the best sort as can
be got in this kind; and these to be sworn to make
due search and true report to the utmost of their
knowledge whether the persons whose bodies they are
appointed to search do die of the infection, or of
what other diseases, as near as they can. And
that the physicians who shall be appointed for cure
and prevention of the infection do call before them
the said searchers who are, or shall be, appointed
for the several parishes under their respective cares,
to the end they may consider whether they are fitly
qualified for that employment, and charge them from
time to time as they shall see cause, if they appear
defective in their duties.
’That no searcher during this
time of visitation be permitted to use any public
work or employment, or keep any shop or stall, or be
employed as a laundress, or in any other common employment
whatsoever.
Chirurgeons.
’For better assistance of the
searchers, forasmuch as there hath been heretofore
great abuse in misreporting the disease, to the further
spreading of the infection, it is therefore ordered
that there be chosen and appointed able and discreet
chirurgeons, besides those that do already belong
to the pest-house, amongst whom the city and Liberties
to be quartered as the places lie most apt and convenient;
and every of these to have one quarter for his limit;
and the said chirurgeons in every of their limits
to join with the searchers for the view of the body,
to the end there may be a true report made of the disease.
’And further, that the said
chirurgeons shall visit and search such-like persons
as shall either send for them or be named and directed
unto them by the examiners of every parish, and inform
themselves of the disease of the said parties.
’And forasmuch as the said chirurgeons
are to be sequestered from all other cures, and kept
only to this disease of the infection, it is ordered
that every of the said chirurgeons shall have twelve-pence
a body searched by them, to be paid out of the goods
of the party searched, if he be able, or otherwise
by the parish.
Nurse-keepers.
’If any nurse-keeper shall remove
herself out of any infected house before twenty-eight
days after the decease of any person dying of the
infection, the house to which the said nurse-keeper
doth so remove herself shall be shut up until the
said twenty-eight days be expired.’