North Brother Island
She was quarantined for 23 years 1915 onwards, till her death. You have to include the previous three years, if you want total number of years.
Typhoid Mary, whose real name was Mary Mallon, was a cook who became a notorious carrier of typhoid fever in the early 20th century. While she did not infect her family, her cooking led to outbreaks that affected many others. Mary was forcibly quarantined for over two decades and eventually died in 1938. There is no evidence that her immediate family members died of typhoid; they were not significantly impacted by her carrier status.
They were quarantined at Riverside Hospital on North Brother Island. Perhaps its most famous patient is Typhoid Mary Mallon, who was imprisoned there for over 20 years. See the Related Link below for the Wikipedia entry.
Typhoid Mary's real name was Mary Mallon. She was an Irish immigrant to America, and responsible for a number of outbreaks of typhoid in New York in the early twentieth century.
They quarentined her on an island on the east river for almost three decades because she spread typhoid.
Most probably Mary Mallon had typhoid before she came to America. She probably brought the typhoid from Ireland. She was one of the many asymptomatic carriers of typhoid.
Typhoid Mary - 1993 TV was released on: USA: 2004
Typhoid Mary is best known for being the first person in the United States of America for carrying the pathogen associated with typhoid fever. Her real name is Mary Mallon.
It is unknown how many deaths "Typhoid Mary" was responsible for.Her real name was Mary Mallon, and at first she was hired by New York banker Charles Henry Warren to be his family's cook during a summer holiday on Long Island. Shortly afterwards, one of Warren's daughters contracted typhoid fever. Next, Mrs Warren and two maids became ill, followed by the gardener and another of Warren's daughters. The owners of the holiday property hired investigators to find the cause.Investigator George Soper, a civil engineer with experience in typhoid fever outbreaks, found that from 1900 to 1907, Mallon had worked at seven jobs in which 22 people had become ill with typhoid fever. The case that Mallon was a carrier was difficult to prove, as Mallon herself was perfectly healthy, showing no signs whatsoever of the disease. However, after being forcibly taken to the Willard Parker Hospital in New York, Mallon was shown to be harbouring Typhoid bacilli. She was then quarantined for several years, only being released on the condition that she no longer work as a cook.Unable to find work that paid as well as a cook's wages, Typhoid Mary returned to cooking five years later at the Sloane Maternity Hospital in Manhattan, under the name of Mrs Brown. Another 25 people became ill with typhoid fever, and two of them died. Mallon was tracked down, and quarantined for another 23 years. Mallon eventually died on 11 November 1938.
Typhoid Mary
Typhoid Mary - comics - was created in 1988.
typhoid Mary i think