Scottish Daily Mail

A museum for our times

The world’s first vaccinatio­n hub is in line to become a must-see attraction

- by SIMON HEPTINSTAL­L

WELL-WisHErs from all over the world have sent donations to help save a little-known country museum in Gloucester­shire — because it’s where vaccinatio­n was invented some 200 years ago.

With Covid jabs at the front of everyone’s minds, an appeal by Dr Jenner’s House in Berkeley has raised more than £45,000 during the pandemic — enough to maintain it until lockdown ends.

Until this year, the house and garden was a little-visited site, ranked only the third best attraction in the small town after the medieval castle (where Edward ii was murdered) and the Cattle Country Farm Park.

But now that the discoverie­s made here two centuries ago are helping to save the world from Covid, the site is set to become a must-see postlockdo­wn attraction.

Visiting the atmospheri­c Queen Anne-style house offers a fascinatin­g insight into the beginnings of immunisati­on. Classic glass-fronted display cabinets show how Edward Jenner gave the first smallpox vaccinatio­n to his gardener’s eight-year-old son, James Phipps, in 1796.

it’s interestin­g to browse Jenner’s candlelit study, tucked under the stairs, and spot that the careful scientific notes and drawings of his findings in leatherbou­nd books were done only with a primitive quill pen.

On the wall is a contempora­ry oil painting of Blossom the cow, who was so central to his earliest experiment­s to combat smallpox — because of its close relationsh­ip to cowpox, Jenner used ‘vacca’, the Latin for ‘cow’, to create the word vaccine.

Jenner delivered his injections in his quirky thatched garden shed. Amazingly, the shed still stands and is now a listed monument. He playfully named the outbuildin­g

The Temple of Vaccinia, but today it seems something of a serious shrine to the millions that immunisati­on has saved since, from smallpox and polio to Covid.

When word spread about Jenner’s miraculous cure for the dreaded smallpox, queues of poor local farmworker­s stretched from the shed right into the town.

The modest Jenner made the jabs free, declaring it ‘immoral’ for him to profit from the discovery.

Visiting the house gives an impression that Jenner, the eighth son of Berkeley’s vicar, was the finest sort of charming eccentric Englishman. As a keen amateur balloonist, for example, he met his future wife when he accidental­ly crash-landed in her garden.

He ALsO took a cutting from Capability Brown’s grapevine at Hampton Court, carried it home and planted it in his greenhouse.

The greenhouse still stands and is now completely filled by the vine that has flourished ever since. sadly, Jenner was widely ridiculed by the world’s first-ever anti-vaxxers and elite London doctors who couldn’t believe that a country doctor had made such a major breakthrou­gh.

Contempora­ry satirical cartoons mocked the idea of vaccinatio­n and showed injected people turning into cows.

But finally, the establishm­ent realised what Jenner had discovered. And President Thomas Jefferson even wrote to him from the U.s. to say ‘mankind can never forget that you have lived’.

A grateful Parliament erected a statue of Jenner in London’s Trafalgar square — but there were more anti-vaxxing protests and so it was moved to Kensington Gardens. We may still have anti-vaxxers today, but the importance of Covid jabs means that Jenner is now being more remembered than ever. ‘We’ve been overwhelme­d by the generosity of people around the world over the past year,’ says museum manager Owen Gower. As well as donating, well-wishers have been buying advance tickets to provide funds for the museum while it is closed.

The site hopes to re-open in June — but, of course, this depends on the success of the latest use of Dr Jenner’s invention.

For more informatio­n see jennermuse­um.com.

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 ??  ?? Home of hope: Dr Jenner’s House in Gloucester­shire. Right, a statue of him
Home of hope: Dr Jenner’s House in Gloucester­shire. Right, a statue of him

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