Admiral Nelson’s letter reveals how he urged the mistress to vaccinate her daughter against smallpox

A recently unearthed letter from Admiral Horatio Nelson to his mistress Lady Emma Hamilton in 1801 reveals how he urged her to give her daughter the newly developed smallpox vaccine.

  • Admiral Horatio Nelson’s letter urges the mistress to vaccinate her daughter
  • The 1801 letter supports the care of Jenner’s smallpox when many were skeptical
  • Edward Jenner found that people were immune to smallpox if they caught smallpox

A recently unearthed letter from Admiral Horatio Nelson to his mistress Lady Emma Hamilton has revealed how he urged her to give her infant daughter the newly developed smallpox vaccine.

The 1801 letter, discovered in the archives of the National Maritime Museum, does not mention a dangerous mission to France that Nelson had to make, but focuses on the health of his daughter, Horatia.

It was written just three years after Edward Jenner discovered the dairies that developed smallpox working close to animals, seemed to be protected from smallpox, the human form of the disease.

In a letter to Lady Hamilton, Admiral Nelson wrote, “The boy only has a fever for two days; and there is only a slight swelling of the arm, instead of staying everywhere.

A 1801 letter shows Admiral Horatio Nelson urging his then-lover to vaccinate his daughter against smallpox, at a time when people were skeptical about innocence.

A 1801 letter shows Admiral Horatio Nelson urging his then-lover to vaccinate his daughter against smallpox, at a time when people were skeptical about innocence.

At the time, many were skeptical about vaccine use; after an attempt to inoculate children by deliberately infecting them with smallpox caused the death of the son of King George III Octavius ​​at the age of four.

Rob Blythe, a senior curator at the National Maritime Museum, shared the letter with The Guardian, revealing a passage in which he professes his love for his mistress, Lady Hamilton.

Although they were both married, neither had a legitimate child.

People were skeptical about vaccinations in the 19th century, after King George III's son died in a treatment initially abandoned for smallpox.  Today vaccines help fight Covid-19.  Pictured: A woman in Thamesmead receiving her punch today

People were skeptical about vaccinations in the 19th century, after King George III’s son died in an early treatment later abandoned for smallpox. Today vaccines help fight Covid-19. Pictured: A woman in Thamesmead receiving her punch today

After her death in 1805, Nelson’s father welcomed Horatia and raised her among his family.

He said: ‘Nelson is a man who sharply understands what the risks mean. He is at risk every day at sea, whether for life or death or from gunshot wounds, cannonballs, splinters … I think he, as a man of war, can probably do a better risk assessment on vaccination than other times. ‘

Blythe hopes Nelson may have heard of Jenner’s vaccine while at the captain’s table.

Nelson urged his mistress, Lady Hamilton, to inoculate his daughter, Horatia, against the smallpox virus

Nelson urged his mistress, Lady Hamilton, to inoculate his daughter, Horatia, against the smallpox virus

He told The Guardian: ‘No doubt the ship’s doctor would have kept relatively up-to-date with the latest medical developments, and when the conversation was delayed in a new narrative of the Battle of the Nile, it is possible that the ship’s doctor I would have said “. Have you heard of inoculation?” just to try to move everyone to a different topic ‘.

The charter was one of more than 2,000 acquired by the National Maritime Museum in 1946.

In 1814 a transcript of the heroic admiral’s correspondence was published, but this letter had hitherto gone unnoticed.

SMALLPOX: THE HISTORY OF THE KILLER VIRUS

  • The first known victim of smallpox was Pharaoh Ramses V of Egypt, who died in 1157 BC and whose mummy still has the scars of the disease.
  • When the Spaniards took it to Hispaniola (now Haiti and the Dominican Republic), which they established for sugar cane planting in 1509, it killed all 2.5 million indigenous people in a decade.
  • More than 200 years ago, Dr. Edward Jenner made a crucial discovery that led to the first vaccine. He found that the dairies that developed smallpox working close to the animals day after day seemed to be protected from smallpox, the human form of the disease.
  • In Britain, the disease was endemic until 1935.
  • The last major outbreak in Europe was in 1972, when 20 million were vaccinated after a pilgrim returning to Yugoslavia from Mecca infected 175 people.
  • Doctors began a vaccination campaign to end smallpox, which was successful in the late 1970s.
  • All nations were asked to destroy the stockpiles of the virus or deliver them to high-security facilities in the US or Russia. It is feared that terrorists could obtain supplies from Russia in the 1980s.

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