Online Book Reader

Home Category

Pox_ An American History - Michael Willrich [225]

By Root 495 0
Canadiennes,” Canadian Historical Review, 85 (2004): 35–62. See “Vaccine Calves on Market,” CT, Mar. 3, 1901, 14.

53 Chapin, Municipal Sanitation, 580–84. Abbott, “Vaccination,” 138, 147–49.

54 John Duffy, A History of Public Health in New York City 1866–1966, 242.

55 W. B. Clarke, “The Pot Calls the Kettle Black,” American Homeopathist, 26 (May 1900), 159, 160. Otis Clapp & Son display advertisement, New England Medical Gazette, Dec. 1897, unnumbered page in advertising section. Parke, Davis & Company display advertisement, ILLMJ, 51 (Feb. 1902), unpaginated advertising page.

56 John Anderson, Art Held Hostage: The Battle over the Barnes Collection (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2003), 7–30. Richard J. Wattenmaker, “Dr. Albert C. Barnes and the Barnes Foundation,” in Great French Paintings from the Barnes Foundation: Impressionist, Post-impressionist, and Early Modern (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1993), 3–27.

57 “Lockjaw in Camden,” NYTRIB, Nov. 21, 1901, 8. “Virus Did Not Cause Lockjaw,” ibid., Nov. 20, 1901, 6. “Smallpox Virus Was Pure,” NYS, Nov. 20, 1901, 5. “Vaccination and Lockjaw,” ibid., Nov. 21, 1901, 6. See also, Albert C. Barnes, “Facts About the Camden Cases of Tetanus,” letter to the editor, NYT, Nov. 21, 1901.

58 “Camden Board of Health Report,” 112–18, esp. 113. “No Lockjaw Germs in Virus,” WP, Dec. 1, 1901, 24.

59 “The Tetanus Cases in Camden and St. Louis,” ADPR, Nov. 25, 1901, 310.

60 “Vaccine and Antitoxin,” NYT, Dec. 8, 1901, 6. “The Tetanus Problem,” PNA, Nov. 30, 1901, 8. “Smallpox: Vaccination and Tetanus,” Current Literature, 32 (April 1902), 486. W. R. Inge Dalton, “Responsibility for the Recent Deaths from the Use of Impure Antitoxins and Vaccine Virus,” Canadian Journal of Medicine and Surgery, 11 (Jan. 1902), 35.

61 Robert N. Willson, “Tetanus Appearing in the Course of Vaccinia; Report of a Case,” Proceedings of the Philadelphia County Medical Society, 22 (Nov. 1901), 353–66, esp. 364. “Discussion,” ibid., 367–69, esp. 367.

62 “Three Children Expire from the Disease After Vaccination,” NYTRIB, Nov. 27, 1901, 14; “Another Case of Tetanus,” ibid., Dec. 5, 1901, 6. “More Deaths from Tetanus: Poisoned Vaccine Still Proving Fatal at Camden, N.J.,” Omaha World-Herald, Nov. 27, 1901, 1. “More Deaths from Lockjaw,” Medical News, Dec. 7, 1901, 909. “Another Tetanus Victim Succumbs,” Philadelphia Inquirer, Dec. 8, 1901, 7. Twelfth Census of the United States (1900): Schedule No. 1—Population: Camden, NJ, Supervisor’s District No. 6, Enumeration District No. 67 (Overby); ibid., Enumeration District No. 73 (Rosevelt). Neither Heath nor Johnson was recorded in the 1900 census in Camden County. “Camden Board of Health Report,” 115.

63 “Vaccine and Antitoxin,” NYT, Dec. 8, 1901, 4. “A Medical Inquiry as to Vaccine and Antitoxin,” ibid., Dec. 28, 1901, 6.

64 Arthur Van Harlingen, “Remarks on Vaccination in Relation to Skin Diseases and Eruptions Following Vaccination,” PMJ, 9 (Jan. 25, 1902), 184–86, esp. 186. John H. McCollom, “Vaccination: Accidents and Untoward Effects,” MC, Jan. 1, 1902, 125–38.

65 NCBOH 1897–98, 37-38. F. T. Campbell, “Vaccination,” PMJ, 9 (Apr. 12, 1902): 668. See also CAMBOH 1902, 8.

66 M. J. Rosenau, “Report on the examination of dried lymph and glycerinized vaccine lymph,” enclosed with Walter Wyman to C. P. Wertenbaker, Apr. 6, 1900, CPWL, vol. 1. “Dr. Rosenau Dies,” NYT, Apr. 10, 1946, 25. “Milton J. Rosenau, M. D.,” MMWR Weekly, Oct. 15, 1999, 907.

67 Milton J. Rosenau, “Dry Points Versus Glycerinated Virus, From a Bacteriologic Standpoint,” USSGPHMHS 1902, 446–49, esp. 449. “New York Academy of Medicine,” Pediatrics, 13 (May 1, 1902): 344–49.

68 Rosenau, “Dry Points Versus Glycerinated Virus,” 446. “Society Proceedings: New York Academy of Medicine,” MN, 80 (Mar. 22, 1902), 562ff. Rosenau published his full report in March 1903, USROSENAU. “Conference of State and Provincial Boards of Health of North America,” MR, Nov. 15, 1902, 789.

69 Cleveland Medical Journal quoted in “Vaccine Lymph,” Sanitarian, March 1902. Ibid., 240,

Return Main Page Previous Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader