Hartford Courant

How enslaved Black man’s story could inspire more vaccinatio­ns

- By Clyde W. Ford Clyde W. Ford’s latest book is the forthcomin­g “Of Blood and Sweat: Black Lives, and the Making of White Power and Wealth.”

Less than 25% of Black Americans have been fully vaccinated, the lowest vaccinatio­n rate of any group the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tracks. This unacceptab­ly low rate is the result of many factors, including disproport­ional representa­tion in essential worker settings, a lack of access to quality health care, and racism and associated chronic stress.

Looming large in vaccinatio­n hesitancy among Blacks is distrust in American health care rooted in medical racism and experiment­ation. The many strategies employed in an attempt to overcome this distrust have included ministers in the community spearheadi­ng vaccinatio­n campaigns and Black health care profession­als answering questions during the pandemic about past medical malfeasanc­e and current medical practice.

One untried strategy that could make a difference: An informatio­n campaign that would highlight how people of African descent have been crucial to the developmen­t of vaccines in the U.S. — going back more than 300 years. This strategy offers a source of pride instead of fear.

The historical record shows that the very notion of inoculatio­n against a virus was first introduced in early America by an enslaved African man named Onesimus. In 1706, a Boston congregati­on gave him to their minister as a gift — that’s right, churchgoin­g Christians thought it was perfectly fine to present another human being to their spiritual leader as a gift. The recipient was Cotton Mather, the acclaimed Puritan minister and author.

Smallpox had been known and feared for some time when Onesimus told Mather around 1716 about an inoculatio­n method to prevent smallpox that had been used on him as a child in Africa. Onesimus most likely came from Ghana, which had been ruled by several Islamic dynasties, and Arabic medical science had developed several methods aimed at preventing smallpox by the 17th century.

According to Mather, Onesimus explained that scraping the skin of an uninfected person with a thorn dipped in “juice” from a smallpox vesicle of someone already infected could protect that person from dying. Mather struggled to accept a slave’s wisdom. He verified this recounting by speaking with other Africans, and with other ministers who had heard similar reports from enslaved people they owned or interviewe­d. Mather also learned the inoculatio­n method Onesimus had described was common throughout the Middle East, the Far East and Africa.

In a letter to what was then called the Royal Society, he called Onesimus “a pretty Intelligen­t Fellow.” Mather soon became a believer in inoculatio­n, advocating for it from his pulpit and in his writings. This drew the ire of his fellow white Bostonians, who resented the idea that knowledge obtained from a so-called uneducated, uncivilize­d African could be useful.

Newspapers inveighed against Mather. Ministers preached his damnation. An explosive device was thrown through the window of his home. Then, on May 26, 1721, the sailing-ship Seahorse arrived in Boston harbor from the Caribbean, and Mather wrote in his diary: “The grievous Calamity of the Small-pox has now entered the Town.”

As the epidemic spread from the ship to citizens in Boston, Mather partnered with Zabdiel Boylston, a physician, to administer vaccines via Onesimus’ method. Boylston inoculated his son, and his enslaved African workers before inoculatin­g other Bostonians. Only six of the 242 people inoculated using Onesimus’ method died, a mortality rate of 1 in 40. Among those who had not undergone the procedure, the mortality rate was 1 in 7.

Lives were saved. Mather was vindicated. Boylston was lauded. The Boston inoculatio­ns helped pave the way for English physician Edward Jenner, in

1796, to develop the smallpox vaccine, a similar but safer inoculatio­n technique. The procedure was called “vaccinatio­n” because cowpox was used; in Latin, “vacca” means cow.

Onesimus’ role was largely lost to history until 2016, when medical historians voted him “one of the 100 Best Bostonians of All Time” in Boston Magazine. The historical record also shows that enslaved people were the subjects of vaccine experiment­ation. For example, in 1801 Thomas Jefferson had 50 of those he enslaved at Monticello injected with a smallpox vaccine, then daringly exposed them to the live smallpox virus. Only after they showed no symptoms would he allow two dozen of his family members to be vaccinated.

A direct line can be drawn between inoculatio­n in Boston in the early 1700s and the COVID-19 vaccine today. For instance, the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines use pieces of a virus’ genetic material (MRNA) to create an immune response.

Black Americans should rightly be suspicious of an American health care system that has through the centuries treated them as disposable laboratory rats. But by highlighti­ng Onesimus’ role in the developmen­t of vaccines, public health officials might be able to persuade more Black Americans to roll up their sleeves and receive the COVID-19 vaccine with pride, knowing the history of the injection they’re receiving can be traced back to an enslaved African man.

“One untried strategy that could make a difference: An informatio­n campaign that would highlight how people of African descent have been crucial to the developmen­t of vaccines in the U.S. — going back more than 300 years.”

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