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This is an American history educational moment of those who made a difference during the Revolutionary War era and how they served our country.
During the American Revolutionary War, George Washington fought two enemies: The British and smallpox. British troops were reasonably healthy due to herd immunity and voluntary inoculation. Herd immunity included the Redcoats sailing in close quarters from Europe. Nonetheless, when the British resigned from Boston in 1776, it was partially due to the smallpox epidemic.
America was suffering from smallpox, a gruesome and life-threatening contagious disease. It caused excruciating misery manifesting as bumps, crusty blisters, high temperature, blindness and likely death.
The dawn of relief came from Onesimus, an enslaved African, and Rev. Cotton Mather, a Puritan minister. Onesimus explained to the Rev. Mather that while still in Africa, he underwent variolation. Variolation is a simple procedure of transferring diseased matter, via a thread, from a smallpox-infected individual to a small incision on a healthy person’s body.
The Rev. Mather asked questions about variolation and learned it was also practiced in Turkey, China and elsewhere. A physician, Zabdiel Boylston, was intrigued with Onesimus’ and Mather’s information and conducted his own medical treatment inquiry. Dr. Boylston learned that people who were not variolated were almost six times more likely to die from smallpox.
Thus, Dr. Boylston inoculated two servants and his 6-year-old son, which produced positive results. During the following year, Dr. Boylston inoculated 242 people, and only six died from smallpox.
These results led George Washington to order all recruits to be inoculated immediately upon enlisting into the Continental Army, along with being issued their uniforms and equipment. This mandatory procedure continues in the military and elsewhere.
Undoubtedly, the prosocial and pioneering actions of Mathers, Washington, and mainly Onesimus, helped save a generation and beyond, eventually eradicating smallpox. Onesimus’ achievement was historically ignored for decades. Yet, in 2016, he was celebrated as one of the most outstanding “Bostonians of All Time” by Boston Magazine.
Please visit your local Charters of Freedom setting on Valley River Avenue in downtown Murphy. A Charters of Freedom setting consists of the Declaration of Independence, U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights. They are on permanent display analogous to the Charters of Freedom in the National Archives in Washington, D.C. Please visit the website FoundationForward.com to learn more about our existing settings.
All teachers are encouraged to contact Dr. Streater for information and complementary student education materials to enhance experiential field trips to their Charters of Freedom settings. In addition, everyone is welcome and urged to obtain a personalized engraved legacy paver for placement at their local Charters of Freedom
setting.
Please contact Dr. Streater by email at david.streater@mymail.barry.edu for engraved legacy paver information along with paired educational materials.
Dr. David Streater is director of education for Foundation Forward, 501(c)3. He is a retired college instructor/administrator and a retired probation and parole officer/administrator. In addition, David is a criminologist who has an acute history interest, served in the Navy and is a resident of Burke County.
