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  • Cow-pock inoculation : The following facts are laid before the public for the encouragement of those, who entertain any doubt respecting the efficacy and success of vaccine inoculation ... / [John Theodore Archibald Reed].
  • A bill for ensuring the benefit of vaccination to such poor persons as are desirous thereof : ordered, by the House of Commons, to be printed, 16 June 1815.
  • Cow-pock inoculation : The following facts are laid before the public for the encouragement of those, who entertain any doubt respecting the efficacy and success of vaccine inoculation ... / [John Theodore Archibald Reed].
  • A bill for ensuring the benefit of vaccination to such poor persons as are desirous thereof : ordered, by the House of Commons, to be printed, 16 June 1815.
  • Cow-pock inoculation : The following facts are laid before the public for the encouragement of those, who entertain any doubt respecting the efficacy and success of vaccine inoculation ... / [John Theodore Archibald Reed].
  • Cow-pock inoculation : The following facts are laid before the public for the encouragement of those, who entertain any doubt respecting the efficacy and success of vaccine inoculation ... / [John Theodore Archibald Reed].
  • Mémoire adressé au Congrès de Rastatt concernant la petite vérole / Johann Christian Wilhelm Juncker.
  • Mémoire adressé au Congrès de Rastatt concernant la petite vérole / Johann Christian Wilhelm Juncker.
  • William Woodville. Stipple engraving by L.(?) Perrot, 1803, after Antoine Ansiaux.
  • An account of the manner of inoculating for the small pox in the East Indies. With ... observations on the ... mode of treating that disease in those parts / [J.Z. Holwell].
  • An account of the success of inoculating the small pox in Great Britain, for the year 1724. With a comparison, between the miscarriages in that practice, and the mortality of the natural small pox / By James Jurin.
  • Edward Jenner, dressed in antique robes, vaccinates a baby on its mother's lap, shaded by a tree; around, a cow, cowherd and nurse. Sepia wash drawing, 1820.
  • Edward Jenner vaccinating a boy. Lithograph after E.E. Hillemacher, 1884.
  • An account of the success of inoculating the small pox in Great Britain, for the year 1724. With a comparison, between the miscarriages in that practice, and the mortality of the natural small pox / By James Jurin.
  • The workplace of a female healer (midwife and surgeon), with signboard, from outside. Reproduction of wood engraving after H. Daumier, 1841.
  • A man vaccinating a small girl, other girls with loosened bodices wait their turn apprehensively. Gouache by L. Calkin, ca. 1901.
  • A man vaccinating a small girl, other girls with loosened bodices wait their turn apprehensively. Gouache by L. Calkin, ca. 1901.
  • Edward Jenner vaccinating a young child, held by its mother, with a man behind taking cowpox from a cow. Chromolithograph.
  • Aesculapius pays tribute to Edward Jenner for introducing vaccination. Etching by J. Gerstner after I.J. Weidlich, 1801.
  • Edward Jenner vaccinating his son, held by Mrs Jenner; a maid rolls up her sleeve, a man stands outside holding a cow. Coloured engraving by C. Manigaud after E Hamman.
  • Edward Jenner vaccinating his son, held by Mrs Jenner; a maid rolls up her sleeve, a man stands outside holding a cow. Coloured engraving by C. Manigaud after E Hamman.
  • History and pathology of vaccination / by Edgar M. Crookshank.
  • A travelling procession of health officials who ironically praise the coming of vaccination. Etching.
  • A procession of health officials ironically proclaiming the coming of vaccination. Coloured etching.
  • Edward Jenner vaccinates a young child on its mother's lap: prosperous domestic interior. Lithograph attributed to J.-L. Tirpenne, 1820/1830.
  • A woman refusing to get into a cab believing she will catch smallpox, the driver humorously reassures her. Wood engraving after J. Leech, 1863.
  • Front and reverse of a medal presented to Jenner by naval medical officers in 1801. Engraving, 1801, after a medal made by T. Harper.
  • Seven members of the French committee on vaccination rail at Tapp, a health officer who resists the new discovery. Coloured etching, c. 1800.
  • Seven members of the French committee on vaccination rail against Tapp, who resists the new discovery. Line engraving, c. 1800.
  • A diseased woman turning into a mermaid, a physician riding a cow and an apothecary wielding a syringe form a grotesque procession that scares children; referring to the distrust of the French public in the face of vaccination. Coloured etching.