The Religious Politics of Smallpox Vaccination, 1899-1901

Author:

Cater Ben

Abstract

AbstractIn January 1900, John E. Cox filed a lawsuit in Third District Court, Salt Lake County, against the Salt Lake City Board of Education and the principal of Hamilton school, Samuel B. Doxey. Cox asserted that Doxey had violated the law on January 23 when he forbade his ten-year-old daughter, Florence Cox, to enter school on account of her failure to provide satisfactory proof of smallpox vaccination from a licensed medical doctor, a condition of school attendance. This condition existed due to the highly contagious nature of smallpox and the close social interaction that schools promoted. According to health authorities, a smallpox epidemic appeared to be imminent, with several cases of the disease in the Salt Lake Valley and two hundred more in the state. Yet Florence possessed “sound health” and no obvious signs of illness and, therefore, had been “wrongly excluded.” Cox’s attorney asserted: “Neither boards of health nor boards of education have a right to exclude unvaccinated children from schools, unless express authority is given by the Legislature or ordinance to that effect.” In the case at bar, “the health board is passing rules which in effect are legislative enactments.”1

Publisher

University of Illinois Press

Reference106 articles.

1. 1 State of Utah Ex rel. J. E. Cox, Plaintiff, vs. the Board of Education of Salt Lake City, Utah, and Samuel Doxey, Defendants, January 25, 1900, No. 2971, reel 79, Series 1622, Third District Court, Civil Case Files, Utah State Archives and Records Service, Salt Lake City, Utah (hereafter USARS).

2. 2 Ben Cater, “Segregating Sanitation in Salt Lake City, 1870-1915,” Utah Historical Quarterly 82 (Spring 2014): 92-113. Good books on this topic include Suellen Hoy, Chasing Dirt: The Pursuit of Cleanliness (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995); Alan Kraut, Silent Travelers: Germs, Genes, and the “Immigrant Menace” (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994); and Natalia Molina, Fit to be Citizens? Public Health and Race in Los Angeles, 1879-1939 (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2006). “Gentile” is a historical category used by and against non-Mormons in the nineteenth century, although it is no longer an acceptable term to delineate religious identity.

3. 3 Frank Esshom, Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah (Salt Lake City: Utah Pioneers Book Publishing Company, 1913), 847.

4. 4 State of Utah ex rel. John E. Cox, Respondent, v. the Board of Education of Salt Lake City and Samuel Doxey, Appellants, 21 Utah 403 (1900).

5. 5 “Reports of Cases Determined in the Supreme Court of the State of Utah, including Portions of the October Term, 1899, and February Term, 1900,” vol. 21 (Chicago: Callaghan and Company, 1901), 421-28.

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