Early Inoculation

LinnetLegs

Active Member
Look at this fabulous entry from the parish burials for Bromsberrow. The vicar kept a gold mine of information. I found my direct ancestor died in child birth and her brother died from TB but also served in the army.

Text reads:
Mary, the Wife of John Hardman, was buried December the thirteenth, aged 44, and on the twenty-fifth of the same Month John Hardman was also buried, aged near 50 years.

Mem: This worthy Couple fell a sacrifice to their prejudices against Inoculation for the small-pox, having died of that disorder caught in the natural way: the circumstance is here mentioned, as a warning to others not to commit a similar error. Four of their Children were at the same time afflicted with this malady, and the two Sons narrowly escaped the same fate.

This was a year before Edward Jenner discovered the safer "vaccination" using cowpox in 1796!!!

I think if this vicar was alive today, he would be interested in genealogy....
 

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I think if this vicar was alive today, he would be interested in genealogy....

I wonder if these people, who left such messages, were mindful that one day their notes would be invaluable to historians. The best I have encountered was on a baptism - 'She said he was her husband but he wasn't!' - which didn't have the same historical interest as LinnetLegs' vicar but at least stopped me trawling for a marriage record that didn't exist.
 
My father contracted smallpox at a jungle training school in India in 1944. Not the best place for it- but he got through and got back home.

His own father was not vaccinated according to his WW1 record.

I later discovered that dad's maternal ancestors came from Berkeley where Edward Jenner conducted his experiments! Somewhat ironic!
 
My 4th great aunt Ann FRANKLIN of Blockley, Worcestershire died aged 11 in 1784 of Smallpox as a result of the innoculation according to the parish register - so sad.

Janet
I recently read of early vaccines not always working until the man who developed the vaccine went back & improved something there-in. I have a feeling it was from research material in a Nathan Dylan Goodwin novel I'm reading [or was]. Can't now swear to it having been 'small pox though. :(
 
I wonder if these people, who left such messages, were mindful that one day their notes would be invaluable to historians. The best I have encountered was on a baptism - 'She said he was her husband but he wasn't!' - which didn't have the same historical interest as LinnetLegs' vicar but at least stopped me trawling for a marriage record that didn't exist.
Are you sure she meant that she was not married, or that he had not done the things husbands should to produce children?
 
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