The Anti-Vaccination Movement

Anti-vaccination cartoon, 1890s. From the Scrapbook of Anti-Vaccinations Clippings. Call number: 8c242.
Anti-vaccination cartoon, 1890s. From the Scrapbook of Anti-Vaccinations Clippings. Call number: 8c242.

The anti-vaccination movement has been around nearly as long as the usage of vaccinations. Vaccines were first used as early as 10th century in China in the form of inoculations which is a slightly different process than vaccination. Inoculation uses the live and non-weakened form of the virus, while vaccinations use dead or weaken forms of viruses. The Western world didn’t begin the use of inoculations until the early 1700s.

Cotton Mather, a Puritan minister from Massachusetts, introduced large scale smallpox inoculations amongst his congregation in 1721 during an outbreak of the disease, but pushback came in the form of local clergymen and physicians opposed to the inoculations. Edward Jenner, who worked as a zoologist, scientist, and physician in England during the 1770s and 80s, was the first to inoculate patients from cowpox in England. Being such a new concept to the Western world, vaccines were in use in only a small population and very few knew what was the actual process was. Even Jenner was still working out the fine details of the inoculation to make it safer to implement. Despite the process being effective and Jenner being a Christian himself, there were groups who disagreed with his inoculations because of their own religious beliefs.

Although objectors to the vaccinations were adamant in their beliefs, most states, as well as the country of England, eventually passed their own laws on the need for a vaccinated population. Objections to these laws were due to the compulsory nature of the Acts. The 1898 Act added a clause that allowed “conscientious objectors” to refuse the vaccination. Through this clause parents could apply for an exemption from inoculations for themselves and their children. The Historical Medical Library (HML) holds a book called Sanitation v. Vaccination (1912), which argues that improvements in sanitation is what lowered the cases of diseases that were having devastating effects on the populations around the world.

There are many more examples like this in the form of pamphlets, books, news clippings, and images. One of the more recent historical anti-vaccination writings in the Library is from the United Lodge of Theophists (India, 1955) “Against Vaccination and Vivisection”. At the time of the publishing of this pamphlet, the anti-vaccination movement continued to argue against compulsory inoculations and were under the impression that Jenner had used his fortune that he made from his findings to push Parliament in his direction and fund the National Vaccine Establishment.

The Library holds many more items with examples of how the anti-vaccination movement has evolved over the years. From objections to vaccinations because of religious beliefs, then anti-compulsory issues, to mistrust in the governments and medical doctors that pushed for vaccinations: all of these reasons contribute to the anti-vaccination movements today.

The links below will direct you to the catalog record or finding aid of the resource listed.  Remember to check our library catalog and finding aids – these are only some of the great sources we have about the anti-vaccination movement!

Primary sources

scrapbookAnti-vaccination scrapbook, undated
Call number: Z8c 11

 

docbox-croppedRecords of the Anti-Vaccination Society of America, 1885
Call number: 10c 98

 

scrapbookScrapbook of anti-vaccination clippings, 1892
Call number: 8c 242

 

docbox-croppedAn Argument for and Against: The Compulsory Vaccination of School Children…
By C . N. Haskell, 1908
Call number: Homeopathy Pam vol.181, no.14

 

book-croppedBoth sides of the Vaccination question. The fallacy of Vaccination/What vaccination has really done
by John Pitcairn/Jay Franklin Schamberg, 1911
Call number: Dk 99

 

book-croppedLeicester: Sanitation versus Vaccination: its vital statistics compared with those of other towns, the army, navy, Japan, and England and Wales
by J . T. Biggs, circa 1912
Call number: Dk 264

 

docbox-croppedReplies to pro-vaccination arguments
by the National Anti-Vaccination League, circa 1944
Call number: Pam 847

 

docbox-croppedAgainst Vaccination and Vivisection
by United Lodge of Theosophists, 1955
Call number: Pam 14684

 

Secondary sources

magazineVaccination (journal)
Volumes 6-8, 1904-1906
Call number: Serial, Vaccination

 

book-croppedCotton Mather: First Significant Figure in American Medicine
by Otho T. Beall, 1954
Call number: 1b 2178

 

book-croppedThe eradication of smallpox: Edward Jenner and the first and only eradication of a human infectious disease
by H. Bazin, 2000
Call number: WZ 100 J54 BA 2000

 

PC-ComputerThe History of Vaccines (website)
Created by The College of Physicians of Philadelphia

 

 

*Content written by Patrick Elgert, Temple University Cultural Fieldwork Initiative intern

Exploring Herbal Medicine

Woodville, William, Medical botany vol. 1, 1793. Call no Qx 113.
Woodville, William, Medical botany vol. 1, 1793. Call no Qx 113.

Herbal medicine has been in use for millennia, with some of the earliest recorded instances being found in the ancient East, Middle East, and the Egyptians. Ancient Greeks and Romans relied on herbs for their healing properties, and early scholars like Aristotle (384 – 322 B.C.E.) and Theophrastus (371 – 287 B.C.E.) wrote about these plants and their healing properties. De materia medica (Latin for “medical material”) by Pedanius Dioscorides, written sometime between 50 and 75 C.E., is an early example of an encyclopedia and pharmacopoeia. Books like this would contain descriptions of plants, their traits, and recipes for medicinal use.

During the Middle Ages, herbal medicine was still a common form of treatment.  The first printed books about it, called herbals, were printed in the late 15th century. Herbals contain illustrations or woodcuts of plants along with descriptions, traits, and medicinal recipes. Herbals remained popular well into the 19th century. The first synthetic drug was discovered and 1869, and synthetic drugs became more widely used during the next century and a half.

Near the end of the 20th century, more people began looking for alternatives to synthetic drugs and “re-discovered” herbal medicine. Today, many stores offer plant-based medicines and more medical practices offer integrative or alternative care.

The links below will direct you to the catalog record or finding aid of the resource listed.  Remember to check our library catalog and finding aids – these are only some of the great sources we have about herbal medicine!

Primary sources

fulton-diaryEdgar Hewish recipe book of medical remedies and household mixture, undated
Call number: 10a 434

 

fulton-diaryTimothy Hall recipe book, 1823-1834
Call number: MSS 2/0285-01

 

fulton-diaryA course of fifteen lectures on medical botany…
by Samuel Robinson, 1834
Call number: Qk 4b

 

book-croppedThe sick man’s friend. Being a plain, practical medical work; designed for the use of families and individuals on vegetable, or botanical principles
by P.E. Sanborn, 1836
Call number: Qk 25

 

book-croppedPaul Goddard “receipt” (recipe) book, circa 1857
Call number: 10a 43

 

book-croppedMadame Young’s guide to health: her experience and practice for nearly forty years, a true family herbal ….
by Amelia Young, 1858
Call number: WB 120 Y68m 1858

 

cameraPhotograph: Medicinal herb peddler, circa 1870
Call number: Picture file #2

 

book-croppedMeals medicinal: with “herbal simples, ” (of edible parts) curative foods from the cook; in place of drugs from the chemist
by William Thomas Fernie, 1905
Call number: Qd 80

 

book-croppedHerbs for health; a concise treatise on medicinal herbs, their usefulness and correct combination in the treatment of diseases. A guide to health by natural means. With many black and colored illustrations
by Otto Mausert, circa 1932
Call number: Yb 54

 

book-croppedThe green pharmacy: new discoveries in herbal remedies for common diseases and conditions from the world’s foremost authority on healing herbs
by James A. Duke, 1997
Call number: WB 925 D877g 1997

 

Secondary sources

book-croppedHerbals, their origin and evolution: a chapter in the history of botany, 1470-1670
by Agnes Robertson Arber, 1938
Call number: QK 15 A664h 1938

 

book-croppedNature’s medicines: the folklore, romance, and value of herbal remedies
by Richard Lucas, 1966
Call number: Qb 121

 

*Content written by Chrissie Perella, Archivist