As Fredrick Seitz once said, “A good scientist is a person whom the childhood quality lingers on. One he gets an answer he has other questions,” we know that Edward Jenner was aspired to acquire a cure for smallpox. Jenner was persistent even after people detested him and his theory. Jenner influenced the world by curing smallpox, saving the lives of thousands of people, and evolving future generations health.
Edward Jenner was an English doctor who helped create and popularize smallpox vaccines. He helped save lives of countless amounts of people through his pioneering work. Over time he became known as “the father of immunology” and later vaccinations.
Edward Jenner was born on May 17, 1749. He was the sixth child of Stephan Jenner and Sarah Jenner. In addition to his church offices, Jenner’s father owned a considerable amount of land in the vicinity. In 1754, both of Jenner’s parents died just a few weeks of each other, Edward was five years old at the time. He was now under the guardiancy of his older brother.
Jenner’s first school was taught by Mr. Clissold, at a nearby village of the Wotton under-edge. He was later sent to grammar. He also studied at St. Georges hospital under John Hunter, a surgeon, and was influenced …show more content…
He continued his study of wildlife and followed any new developments in medical science in his spear time. After his wife died in 1815, Jenner rarely left Berkeley and visited London less often. He continued his studies in natural history and completed a paper on birds’ migration which was published after his death. His paper showed that birds migrate into England in the summer for reproduction and that the ovaries of the female and testes of a male become enlarged during this time. Because of Jenner’s extra time he could create writing verses, activities in local medical society, observe natural history, and he was even able to play the