Meschede was founded as a settlement around a convent, the
Walpurgis-Stift , in the 10th century. In
1572, it became a member of the
Hanseatic League. In the 18th century, many inhabitants of Meschede died during at least two epidemics of
dysentery. Both in
World War I and in
World War II, Meschede was notorious as a location where the Germans exploited
POWs in labour camps. In February, 1945, the town was destroyed by Allied air raid bombings, because of its strategically important railway station, but rebuilt after the war. In 1921, the
Sauerländer Heimatbund was founded. In 1970, Meschede's St. Walburga Hospital was the site of a
smallpox outbreak, as described in the book
The Demon in the Freezer by
Richard Preston. ==Economy==