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by Science Source
$51.00
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Our lightweight, microfiber tapestries are available in three different sizes and feature incredible artwork to complement any wall space. Each tapestry has hemmed edges for secure hanging with nails and/or thumbtacks.
Design Details
Vaccinating the Poor, an engraving from 1873 by Sol Eytinge, depicting smallpox vaccination of the poor. A racially-mixed group of men, women, and... more
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Machine wash cold and tumble dry with low heat.
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1 - 2 business days
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"Vaccinating the Poor," an engraving from 1873 by Sol Eytinge, depicting smallpox vaccination of the poor. A racially-mixed group of men, women, and children observe a physician as he vaccinates the tattooed left arm of a burly young man. In 1796 Edward Jenner, an English doctor, coined the word vaccination to describe his use of cowpox inoculation to obtain immunity to smallpox. Smallpox was a terrible disease, epidemics of which often had a mortality rate of 20% and left survivors disfigured. Jenner inoculated a boy with fluid obtained from a cowpox blister on the hand of a milk-maid. He later inoculated the boy with smallpox but found him to be immune. Vaccination soon became widespread and eradicated the disease in Europe and the US.
$51.00
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