Document Type

Honors Project - Open Access

Abstract

Across settler societies, health narratives were shaped by evolving tensions between lay and expert knowledge, frameworks of disease causation, and perceptions of the environment as both a source of health and a threat. In the decades following Euro-American settlement (1860-1900), Minnesota became a focal point for these debates, with its landscape fostering complex and competing narratives on health, wellbeing, and disease. This paper explores how public health discourse developed in Minnesota through the perspectives of institutions, the public, and economic interests. Combining environmental history with critical discourse analysis of archival materials, this study examines shifts within the Minnesota State Board of Health, where officials increasingly adopted germ theory over environmental explanations of disease. Meanwhile, public perceptions varied widely, as settlers viewed the landscape as both a healthful refuge and a potential hazard; social fears linked disease with immigration and urbanization. Real estate developers further promoted Minnesota as a “healthful” destination, reshaping landscapes to support commercial aims. These intersecting narratives reveal how societal and environmental forces influenced public health policy and practice, contributing to enduring place-based conceptions of health on the North American frontier.

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