The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
An excellent establishment
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A devastating and highly infectious disease, smallpox left its victims covered in a rash that resulted in painful fluid-filled pustules that would eventually burst and scab over. With a high mortality rate, survivors usually had terrible scarring all over their bodies. While the colony's strict quarantine measures largely protected the city, there was still risk of an outbreak brought into the country by overseas travellers. Vaccinations against smallpox had been available in Sydney since the first vaccine materials had been imported in 1804, but maintaining a supply of the vaccine material, or 'lymph' in Sydney was difficult. It was often transported between wax-sealed glass slides, or as dried scabs sloughed off a successfully vaccinated patient. However, because its viability declined markedly over time—especially in hot weather—lymph was ideally administered in a fresh state, often by direct arm-to-arm transmission. This was precisely the method used by the colony’s inspector general of hospitals to maintain a small supply of lymph for Sydney in the 1830s. Alarmingly, a sample of this potentially infectious material was found at the New South Wales State Archives and Records in 2010. Stocks were always erratic however, and in the late 1830s it was proposed that a permanent vaccine depot be established. Nothing came of this suggestion, or subsequent ones, until 1846, when the new Governor, Fitzroy, announced the establishment of the Vaccine Institution. Opening in 1847, the Institution's primary purpose was to ‘search in the Town & vicinity for those of the lower orders who have neglected vaccination of their children’ and inoculate these children to lessen their risk of contracting smallpox, should it elude the city’s hitherto successful quarantine defences. ‘It is as much a public sanitary question as the drainage of the city, the Building Act, or the quarantine laws’, asserted Isaac Aaron, the editor of Australian Medical Journal, in the Sydney Morning Herald in October 1846. The Vaccine Institution operated out of the Emigrants’ Barracks in Bent Street, literally around the corner from the Sydney Infirmary and Dispensary that was operating from the southern wing of the General Hospital, and also from the Legislative Council’s chambers, which in 1843 had been constructed in the hospital’s northern wing
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smallpox
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