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The problem of scurvy did not stay on the ships that brought the colonists.  The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were replete with reports of how this disease troubled both new and old arrivals throughout the colonies.  Dr. William Douglas stated that:  "In New England the general subsistence of the poorer people is salt pork and Indian beans, with bread of Indian corn meal and pottage of this meal with milk for breakfast and supper."