In October of 1832, around 1000 people at Södermalm in Stockholm died from cholera. The victims were buried at night at the Kolerakyrkogården at Skanstull. In total 3500 people died of the disease that year. Two decades later cholera killed another 2800 people here. This building from 1832 was known as the Dödgrävarboställe, the grave-diggers cottage. Today this is a little park.
Something i would have never known - except you were kind enough to share.
ReplyDeleteThe cottage looks lovely . . .
Sign of hard times.
ReplyDeleteWhat a story. I guess that a lot of country's contain such secrets. You just need someone to uncover.Nice work.
ReplyDeleteA sad tale.
ReplyDeleteHopefully no longer the grave digger's cottage Steffe ✨
ReplyDeleteA sad and devastating period in history.
ReplyDeleteHopefully those days are long gone in your part of the world.
ReplyDelete