Fever of 1721

The Epidemic That Revolutionized Medicine and American Politics

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Stephen Coss: Fever of 1721 (2010, Grand Central Publishing)

English language

Published Feb. 14, 2010 by Grand Central Publishing.

ISBN:
978-0-446-55218-9
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"More than fifty years before the American Revolution, Boston was in revolt against the tyrannies of the Crown, Puritan Authority, and Superstition. This is the story of a fateful year that prefigured the events of 1776. In The Fever of 1721, Stephen Coss brings to life an amazing cast of characters in a year that changed the course of medical history, American journalism, and colonial revolution, including Cotton Mather, the great Puritan preacher, son of the president of Harvard College; Zabdiel Boylston, a doctor whose name is on one of Boston's grand avenues; James and his younger brother Benjamin Franklin; and Elisha Cooke and his protege; Samuel Adams. During the worst smallpox epidemic in Boston history Mather convinced Doctor Boylston to try a procedure that he believed would prevent death--by making an incision in the arm of a healthy person and implanting it with smallpox. "Inoculation" led to vaccination, one …

2 editions

Subjects

  • Medicine, united states
  • Smallpox, vaccination
  • Medicine, history
  • Boston (mass.), history
  • Massachusetts, history, colonial period, ca. 1600-1775