Pox

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Pox Page 53

by Michael Willrich

111 “Compulsory Vaccination,” editorial, Wisconsin Medical Journal, 3 (March 1905), 588. Dr. Hix of Binghamton, New York, in New York State Department of Health, Proceedings of the Conference of Sanitary Officers of the State of New York (Albany, 1905), 38. “Compulsory Vaccination,” Boston Journal, Feb. 22, 1905, 6. Untitled editorial, NYT, Feb. 22, 1905, 6. See also “Vaccination Right,” BG, Feb. 21, 1905, 7; “Vaccination by Law,” WP, Feb. 21, 1905, 11; “A Test Case,” CC, Feb. 25, 1905, 12.

  112 Untitled editorial item, Book Notes, May 6, 1905, 71. “Compulsory Vaccination,” Medical Advance, March 1905, 166. On antivaccinationism in the 1910s and 1920s, see James Colgrove, State of Immunity, 45–80.

  113 “The State’s Police Power,” NYTRIB, Feb. 26, 1905, 8.

  114 Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45 ( 1905). E. F. [Ernst Freund], “Limitations of Hours of Labor and the Federal Supreme Court,” Green Bag, 17 (July 1905), 411–17.

  115 Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45, 72 (1905).

  116 Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45, 75–76 (1905).

  117 Charles Warren, “The Progressiveness of the United States Supreme Court,” Columbia Law Review , 13 (1913). On the “myth” of Lochner, see William J. Novak, “The Myth of the ‘Weak’ American State,” American Historical Review, 113 (2008): 752–72. For a fuller discussion of legal progressivism and the police power after Lochner, see Willrich, City of Courts, esp. 96–115. See also Morton J. Horwitz, The Transformation of American Law, 1870–1960: The Crisis of Legal Orthodoxy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992).

  118 William Howard Taft, The Anti-Trust Act and the Supreme Court (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1914), 43–44, 45.

  119 Investigation Case Files of the Bureau of Investigation 1908–1922, Old German Files, 1909–1921, National Archives and Record Administration, Case # 17615; Case Title: Sedition; Suspect Name: Lora C. Little. Ibid., Case # 175676; Case Title: Neutrality Matter; Suspect Name: William Heupel. Ibid., Case # 178488; Case Title: General War Matter; Suspect Name: Mrs. Walter B. Henderson. I accessed these files via the online database Footnote.com, Dec. 10, 2007.

  120 Holmes to Hand, June 24, 1918, in Gerald Gunther, “Learned Hand and the Origins of Modern First Amendment Doctrine: Some Fragments of History,” Stanford Law Review, 27 (1975), Appendix, 757.

  121 Schenck v. U.S., 249 U.S. 47, 52 (1919). Abrams v. U.S., 250 U.S. 616, 628 (1919), emphasis added. For a fascinating analysis of “Holmes’s Transformation in Abrams,” see David M. Rabban, Free Speech in Its Forgotten Years, 346–54.

  122 Buck v. Bell, 274 U.S. 200, 207 (1927).

  123 Michigan v. Tyler, 436 U.S. 499, 509 (1977). Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, 542 U.S. 508, 592 (2004) (Justice Thomas dissenting opinion).

  124 Concurring opinion in Doe v. Bolton, 410 U.S. 179, 213–14 (1973). Majority opinion in Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 404 U.S. 833, 857 (1992).

  125 Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11, 29.

  EPILOGUE

  1 BOSHD 1902, 36. Michael R. Albert et al., “The Last Smallpox Epidemic in Boston and the Vaccination Controversy, 1901–1903,” NEJM, 344 (2001), 377. John Duffy, A History of Public Health in New York City, 564. Gretchen A. Condran et al., “The Decline in Mortality in Philadelphia from 1870–1930: The Role of Municipal Services,” in Sickness and Health in America, 3rd ed., ed. Judith Walzer Leavitt and Ronald L. Numbers, 452–66. “Seattle’s worst smallpox epidemic was in 1901–02; 642 reported cases, four deaths.” “Medicine: Smallpox Epidemic,” Time, Apr. 8, 1946.

  2 C.-E. A. Winslow, “The Untilled Fields of Public Health,” SCI, 51 (Jan. 9, 1920), 30. On this point, see James A. Tobey, Public Health Law, 1–6. Franklin H. Top and Laura E. Peck, “A Small Outbreak of Smallpox in Detroit,” AJPH, 33 (1943): 490–98, esp. 491, 492.

  3 J. P. Leake, “United States Lags in Fight Against Smallpox,” Science News Letter, 29 (1936), 213. A. W. Hedrich, “Changes in the Incidence and Fatality of Smallpox in Recent Decades,” PHR, 51 (Apr. 3, 1936): 363–92. Robert D. Johnston, The Radical Middle Class, 183.

  4 “The Anti-Vaccinationists,” Southern Medical Journal, 14 (1921), 503. Zucht v. King, 260 U.S. 174 (1922).

  5 Williams quoted in “Medicine: Smallpox Epidemic.”

  6 Hedrich, “Changes in the Incidence and Fatality of Smallpox,” 366. Judith Walzer Leavitt, “ ‘Be Safe. Be Sure.’: New York City’s Experience with Epidemic Smallpox,” in Hives of Sickness: Public Health and Epidemics in New York City, ed. David Rosner (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1995), 95–114.

  7 Albert et al., “Last Smallpox Epidemic,” 378. J. V. Irons et al., “Outbreak of Smallpox in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas in 1949,” AJPH, 43 (1953): 25–29.

  8 Charles L. Jackson, “State Laws on Compulsory Immunization in the United States,” Public Health Reports, 84 (1969), 787–95, esp. 788, 789. Judith Sealander, The Failed Century of the Child, esp. 330, 338, 352.

  9 Albert et al., “Last Smallpox Epidemic,” 378. C. Henry Kempe, “The End of Routine Smallpox Vaccination in the United States,” Pediatrics, 49 (1972): 489–92.

  10 D. A. Henderson, Smallpox: The Death of a Disease, esp. 26, 53. Erez Manela, “A Pox on Your Narrative: Writing Disease Control into Cold War History,” Diplomatic History, 34 (2010): 299–323.

  11 Henderson, Smallpox, 14, 90–92. Manela, “Pox on Your Narrative,” 316.

  12 Stanley Music quoted in Paul Greenough, “Intimidation, Coercion and Resistance in the Final Stages of the South Asian Smallpox Eradication Campaign,” Social Science & Medicine, 41 (1995): 635–36. Ibid., 643. See also Manela, “Pox on Your Narrative,” esp. 316–17.

  13 Henderson, Smallpox, 239, 245, esp. 249. Edward A. Belongia and Allison L. Naleway, “Smallpox Vaccine: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly,” Clinical Medicine and Research, 1 (2003): 88.

  14 Henderson, Smallpox, 269–86.

  15 Ibid., 296–97. Jon Cohen and Martin Enserink, “Rough-and-Tumble Behind Bush’s Smallpox Policy,” Science, Dec. 20, 2002, 2312–16.

  16 Massimo Calabresi, “Was Smallpox Overhyped?” Time, Jul. 26, 2004, 16. Madeline Drexler, “A Pox on America,” Nation, Apr. 28, 2003, 7–8. “Fear of Vaccine,” CQ Researcher, Jan. 13, 2006, 39. Jocelyn Kaiser, “Report Faults Smallpox Vaccination,” Science, Mar. 11, 2005, 1540. Donald G. McNeil, Jr., “National Programs to Vaccinate for Smallpox Come to a Halt,” NYT, June 19, 2003. Pamela Sankar et al., “Public Mistrust: The Unrecognized Risk of the CDC Smallpox Vaccination Program,” American Journal of Bioethics, 3 (2003): W22–W25. “U.S. Smallpox Vaccine Programme Stalls as Volunteers Balk,” Lancet, May 10, 2003, 1626. Pascale M. Wortley et al., “Healthcare Workers Who Elected Not to Receive Smallpox Vaccination,” American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 30 (2006): 258–65.

  17 Kathleen S. Swendiman, “Mandatory Vaccinations: Precedent and Current Laws,” Congressional Research Service, CRS Report for Congress, Oct. 26, 2009. Sealander, Failed Century of the Child, 323–25.

  18 “Refusing Kids’ Vaccine More Common Among Parents,” USA Today, May 3, 2010. See Mead v. Secretary of Health and Human Services, U.S. Court of Federal Claims, Office of Special Masters, E-Filed: March 12, 2010, esp. 164. http://www.uscfc.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/Campbell-Smith%20Mead%20Autism%20Decision.pdf, accessed July 8, 2010. See “Vaccine Court Finds No Link to Autism,” CNN.com, Mar. 12, 2010; Donald G. McNeil, Jr., “3 Rulings Find No Link to Vaccines and Autism,” NYT, Mar. 12, 2010. See also Gary L. Freed et al., “Parental Vaccine Safety Concerns in 2009,” Pediatrics, 125 (2010): 654–59; and Saad B. Omer et al., “Vaccine Refusal, Mandatory Immunization, and the Risks of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases,” NEJM, 360 (2009): 1981–88.

  19 Philip J. Smith et al., “Children Who Have Received No Vaccines: Who Are They and Where Do They Live?” Pediatrics, 114 (2004): 187–95. For a revealing argument about contemporary antivaccination sentiment, see Dan Kahan, “Fixing the Communications Failure,” Nature, 463 (2010): 296–97.

  Index

  Abeel v. Clark

  abolitionism
/>   abortion

  Adams, E. J.

  Adams, John

  Adams v. Burdge

  Addams, Jane

  administrative power

  African Americans

  Birmingham outbreak and

  civil rights of

  close living conditions of

  compulsory vaccination and

  epidemics of 1898–1903 and

  equal protection clause and

  health of

  life expectancy of

  Middlesboro outbreak and

  as miners

  mistrust of white medicine

  occupations of

  as physicians

  scapegoating of

  smallpox as disease of

  vaccination rate

  as vaccine refusers

  Wertenbaker on

  whites and. See race/racism

  in Wilmington outbreak

  Aguinaldo, Emilio

  AlabamaSee also specific places

  Alaska

  alastrim

  Alden, C. H.

  Alexander Company

  Alger, Cyrus

  Alger, Russell A.

  Allgeyer v. Louisiana

  All Nations Block

  American Association, Inc.

  American Association, Ltd.

  American Druggist and Pharmaceutical Record

  American Medical Association

  American Medicine

  American Tobacco Company

  Amerige, C. W.

  Ames, Azel

  Ames, John

  Anderson, Scott

  anti-imperialism

  antimonopoly

  antivaccinationism/antivaccinationists

  abolitionism and

  antimonopoly resentments and

  in Boston

  in California

  in Cambridge, Massachusetts

  children’s welfare and

  Christian Scientists as

  as civil disobedience

  data used by

  as dissenting political speech

  effect on public opinion

  in England

  faith healers as

  history of

  Jacobson decision and

  lack of coordination among

  laws

  lawsuits. See vaccination lawsuits

  lawyers specializing in

  legislation

  literature of

  medical licensing and

  modern

  Mormons and

  opposition to

  other causes espoused by

  parents as

  physicians and

  as political act

  post-Jacobson

  progressiveness and, relationship between

  prosecution for

  radical libertarianism and

  reasons for

  significance of

  smallpox solutions offered by

  social class of

  societies ofSee also specific societies

  of southern whites

  strategies of

  Supreme Court case. See Jacobson v. Massachusetts in Sweden

  tensions revealed by

  in the United States See also Jacobson v. Massachusetts

  vaccine quality issue and

  vaccine refusers as distinct from

  victories of

  in Wilmington outbreak

  working class and

  Anti-Vaccination League of America

  Anti-Vaccination News and Sanatorian

  Anti-Vaccination Society of America

  Arena

  army

  British

  Continental

  as force for public healthSee also Medical Department of the U.S. Army

  French

  of Northern Virginia

  Prussian

  Union

  U.S. See Army, U.S.

  Army, U.S.See also soldiers, U.S.

  camps

  exceptional humanity of

  Medical Department. See Medical Department of the U.S. Army

  misconduct

  sanitary campaigns of. See military medicine/ sanitary campaigns

  Third Separate Brigade

  Army Medical School

  army surgeons

  disease causation, ideas about

  duties of

  education of

  line officers as superior to

  mustering of

  Arthur, Alexander

  Arthur, Chester A.

  Atlanta Constitution

  Atlantic City

  Aud, A. Z.

  Augustana Lutheran Church

  autism

  Babcock, J. W.

  bacteria

  Balangiga, Philippines

  Ball, Charles Dudley

  Ballard, Henry

  Balmis, Francisco Xavier de

  Baltimore Sun

  Bancroft, Hugh

  Bangladesh

  Bank of Barings Brothers

  Barbour, George M.

  Barlow, James M.

  Barnes, Albert C.

  Barron v. Baltimore

  Barton, Clara

  Batangas, Philippines

  Bavaria

  Beasley, C. Oscar

  Beatty, T. B.

  Bedford, Massachusetts

  Belgium

  Bell, Austin

  Bell, James Franklin

  Bell County, Kentucky

  Board of Health

  Bell County Fiscal Court

  Belt, J. H.

  Benjamin, Dowling

  beriberi

  Billings, John Shaw

  Bill of Rights

  biologics

  Biologics Control Act

  Birmingham, AlabamaSee also Birmingham outbreak

  Birmingham outbreak

  African Americans and

  compulsory vaccination

  cost of

  federal intervention in

  Middlesboro outbreak compared to

  Birmingham Quarantine Hospital

  Blackstone, William

  Blair, Samuel

  Blauvelt, Alonzo

  Blue, Frank D.

  Bluffton, Indiana

  Blunt, W. T.

  boards of healthSee also specific boards

  Boer War

  Bohemia

  Boone, Daniel

  Booth, C. S.

  Boston

  antivaccinationism in

  Board of Health

  compulsory vaccination in

  death rate from smallpox

  last epidemic

  municipal police force

  pesthouse in

  smallpox control in

  smallpox outbreak in

  vaccination rate

  Boston City Hospital

  Boston Globe, The

  Boston Journal

  Bourns, Frank S.

  bovine vaccine

  advantages of

  in Italy

  U.S. introduction

  Boyd County, Kentucky

  Boylston, Zabdiel

  Bracken, Henry M.

  Bradford, Harry

  Bradley, Joseph

  Bradley, W. O.

  Brandeis, Louis D.

  Branham, John William

  Breen, Michael

  Brewer, David J.

  Bristol, Pennsylvania

  Brooklyn

  Brooklyn Anti-Compulsory Vaccination League

  Brooklyn Eagle

  Brower, Sarah

  Brower, William

  Brownlow, Walter P.

  Bryan, Williams Jenning

  bubonic plague

  Buck, Carrie

  Burchell, J. R.

  Burke, Eliza

  Bush, George W.

  Bushey, S. G.

  Butler, James

  Butler, Kate

  Caballo, Molino

  Caballo, Mrs.

  Caballo’s saloon

  California

  antivaccina
tionism in

  compulsory vaccination in

  Cambridge, Massachusetts

  antivaccinationism in

  Board of Health

  compulsory vaccination in

  death rate from smallpox

  smallpox control in

  smallpox outbreak in

  vaccine refusers in

  Cambridge Chronicle

  Camden, New Jersey

  Board of Education

  Board of Health

  children of

  smallpox in

  vaccine crisis. See Camden vaccine crisis

  Camden Medical Society

  Camden vaccine crisis

  H. K. Mulford Company’s complicity in

  investigation of

  liability for

  newspapers and

  number vaccinated

  parents’ response to

  physicians’response to

  postvaccination tetanus

  school strike

  Camp Alger

  Campbell, F. T.

  camps

  army

  of Cuban reconcentrados

  Philippine reconcentration

  work

  Camp Thomas

  Carty, Lillian

  Caswell, Annie

  Cate, Charles E.

  Catholic Church

  Cavallo, Frank

  Census Bureau, U.S.

  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  Central Law Journal

  Chapin, Charles V.

  Charleston, South Carolina

  Charlotte, North Carolina

  Chicago

  Chicago Tribune

  children/schoolchildren

  of Camden

  compulsory vaccination of

  death rate

  immunization of

  Jenner’s experiments on

  in Middlesboro outbreak

  in New York City outbreak

  risks taken by

  smallpox as disease of

  state mandated immunization of

  weak immune response of

  children’s welfare

  antivaccinationism and

  China/Chinese immigrants

  chiropractic

  cholera

  Christian Scientists

  Churchill, Winston

  civilization, measurement of

  civil rights

  African Americans and

  Civil War, U.S.

  deaths from disease

  Reconstruction amendments

  smallpox during

  Clark, Walter McKenzie

  Clarke, W. B.

  Clay County, Kentucky

  Cleveland

  last epidemic

  pesthouse in

  smallpox outbreak

  vaccine crisis in

  Cleveland, Grover

  Cleveland Journal of Medicine

  Cleveland Medical Journal

 

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