My speech about Edward Jenner at yesterday's full council meeting
I had the last word yesterday at Cumbria County Council - the last item on the agenda was the slot for speeches by county councillors. I used it to make a speech calling for the statue of the founder of modern vaccination, Edward Jenner, which was originally unveiled in Trafalgar Square by Prince Albert, to be put back there.
His statue was moved to a less prominent position in Kensington Gardens after Prince Albert died as a result of pressure from an unholy alliance between the anti-vaxxers of the day and elements of the military who as the British Medical Journal put it at the time, thought that Trafalgar Square should be reserved for those who took the lives of their fellow men and objected to Edward Jenner being there because he had only saved lives.
This was the text of my speech.
Speech to Full Council 15th April 2021
"Mr Chairman, members, officers and any members of the public
still watching.
Councillors will probably be relieved to learn that although
I have not changed my view that the A595 urgently needs to be improved, that
will be my one mention of that road today.
I want to talk about an issue which links the current
pandemic, in particular the vaccination programme which is so vital to our
recovery, the fact that so called “cancel culture” is not as new as we may
think, and the righting of a wrong against the memory of a great man of science
and medicine whose work two centuries ago laid the foundations for the current
fight against Coronavirus.
I am, and I hope and presume most members of this council are,
among the majority of residents of Cumbria who have had one or more doses of an
approved COVID-19 vaccine. As of Wednesday more than 3.46 million people in our
region had received a first dose of an approved vaccine and more than 925
thousand a second dose. All of the top nine categories of vulnerable people
were offered a vaccination by Monday of this week, a couple of days ahead of
the promised target.
Although the dates suggest that most of the heavy lifting in
ending Britain’s second wave of COVID came from the lockdown which is gradually
now ending, academic studies have suggested that the vaccination programme has
already saved ten thousand lives and it will undoubtedly save many more – it is
also vital to our route out of lockdown.
To have developed a vaccine so quickly against a virus which
nobody in Britain had heard of fifteen months ago and use it to protect so many
millions of people is an incredible achievement for the scientists of all
countries who have been involved and all the NHS staff and everyone else who
has contributed to the programme
A phrase often wrongly attributed to Shakespeare or Newton,
and Newton did use it but it actually goes back to St. Bernard of Chartres in the 12th
Century, is that those who achieve great things often stood on the shoulders of
giants. The first set of shoulders which those who have brought off the
incredible vaccination programme were standing on were those of an 18th
century English doctor called Edward Jenner.
Edward Jenner was not the first person to invent any form of
vaccination – an earlier procedure against smallpox called variolation goes
back to fifteenth-century China. This involved injecting dead smallpox residue
into the body – it did provide some protection but at a very heavy price: it
carried a 2% risk of killing the person vaccinated and also a risk that the
person injected could become a carrier of smallpox.
Jenner was however the first person to produce a safe and
effective vaccine – he scientifically tested the popular theory that people who
had been exposed to a similar mild disease, cowpox did not get smallpox, proved
that it was based in fact, and devised a successful vaccination procedure for
smallpox based on injecting dead cowpox
residue. This was effective, carried a vastly lower risk of death – about one
in half a million – and could not make the person injected into a carrier.
Jenner’s vaccination faced ridicule and opposition from the
equivalents in his age of today’s Anti-Vaxxers – but it worked, it was
gradually increasingly adopted throughout the world, and it eventually led to
the complete eradication of smallpox by 1980. It is estimated that Edward
Jenner’s vaccination saved 300 million lives – which means that he probably
saved more human lives than anyone else in history.
A bronze statue to Edward Jenner was originally unveiled in
Trafalgar Square by Prince Albert on 17th May 1858. This was opposed
by the anti-vaxxers of the time and also by some military men because at that
time Trafalgar Square was reserved for memorials for military figures. That
latter tradition was, of course, abandoned some time ago.
As I have said, the practices of cancel culture such as
attacks on statues are not limited to our own century, and opponents of vaccination made several attempts
to have the statue taken down. While Prince Albert lived the government
rightly stood firm against this, but after Albert died the opponents managed in
1862 to get the statue moved to a less prominent position in Kensington
Gardens.
Mr Chairman, this is the year to correct that disgraceful
injustice to a truly great man and by correcting it, make the point of how much
we owe to those who have worked in medicine and by the use of vaccination and
other techniques protected us from the scourge of disease. The idea of
reserving Trafalgar square for military memorials has long been abandoned and
no longer applies.
Our generation has particular cause to be grateful to Edward
Jenner because as the father of modern scientific vaccination he started the
process which at this very moment is not just saving so many people from death
and illness but also paving the way to the end of lockdown and giving us our
lives back.
It is time to put Edward Jenner’s memorial back in Trafalgar
Square.
I am talking to colleagues about the possibility of a
national petition to call for this and I hope that if and when that petition is
put forward that everyone listening will be able to support it.
Thank you for listening to me and, Mr Chairman, for giving me the opportunity to pay tribute to a great man who saved hundreds of millions of lives and deserves to be far better remembered."
Comments
However, I am sure you would agree that it is not always fair to judge historical figures in accordance with rules, standards and laws which were developed long after they died.
One of my fellow county-councillors emailed me after the meeting on the subject of James Phipps, the boy who was injected in Jenner's experiments, and I looked up what became of him. Jenner certainly took an interest in his welfare. According to Wikipedia,
"Later in Phipps's life, Jenner gave him, his wife, and his two children a free lease on a cottage in Berkeley, which went on to house the Edward Jenner Museum between 1968 and 1982.[7] Phipps attended Jenner's funeral on 3 February 1823."
If the person who wrote the comment about "another transparent freemason" believes in transparency then perhaps he or she would like to sign his or her name when posting such comments.
If you're not prepared to sign your name you are in no position to comment on whether somebody else is being transparent.
I had not considered the issue of Edward Jenner being a freemason to be relevant, but yes, he was. And he made no secret of the fact.
If you have anything to say about transparency, demonstrate a bare minimum of it yourself by signing your name.
Otherwise go away and as our Lord put it, take the plank out of your own eye before trying to remove a speck from anyone else's.