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  1. Benjamin Jesty by Michael William Sharp, 1805. Benjamin Jesty (c. 1736 – 16 April 1816) was a farmer at Yetminster in Dorset, England, notable for his early experiment in inducing immunity against smallpox using cowpox . The notion that those people infected with cowpox, a relatively mild disease, were subsequently protected against smallpox ...

  2. Jul 14, 2021 · Jesty's story began in 1774, when the farmer from Yetminster deliberately infected his family with cowpox in a bid to protect them from the deadly smallpox...

  3. Jul 14, 2021 · Jesty's story began in 1774, when the farmer from Yetminster deliberately infected his family with cowpox in a bid to protect them from the deadly smallpox virus....

  4. Sep 29, 2020 · During a smallpox epidemic in the west of England in 1774, farmer Benjamin Jesty decided to try something. He scratched some pus from cowpox lesions on the udders of a cow into the skin of his...

  5. Dec 23, 2006 · During 1774, in the face of a smallpox epidemic, he vaccinated his wife and two sons with cowpox lymph taken from lesions on the udder of an infected cow. Jesty devised and undertook his vaccination method 22 years before Edward Jenner, who is usually credited as the originator of the same practice.

    • Patrick J Pead
    • 2006
  6. The Benjamin Jesty Reference Biography | benjamin-jesty. Benjamin Jesty: Grandfather of Vaccination. by Patrick J Pead MSc FHA. Fellow of The Historical Association. The definitive biography of the world’s first vaccinator. The origins of vaccination subjected to fresh analysis.

  7. Benjamin Jesty ( figure 1 ), a tenant farmer, lived in a substantial stone farmhouse named Upbury ( figure 2 ), next to St Andrew's Church in the centre of Yetminster village, near Sherborne, UK. In 1774, he was aged 37 years and had been married for 4 years to Elizabeth, 35 years; they had two sons, Robert (3 years), Benjamin (2 years), and a ...

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