Abstract

Edward Jenner (1749–1823) was one of the most important British historical medical figures and is considered the pioneer of vaccination and father of immunology. He was born and practised in Berkeley, Gloucestershire and in addition to many biographies about his life and work, his genealogy to 1612 in Standish, Gloucestershire, is well-documented. A single document in Gloucestershire archives establishes the Standish Jenners as a cadet branch of the Jenner family of Kempsford and its surrounding parishes. A remarkably high frequency of early Jenner wills in Gloucestershire and Wiltshire, coupled with standard genealogical research, has established a pedigree that extends that of Edward Jenner by three generations, to approximately 1500 and collaterally, to important land owners in seventeenth century Gloucestershire and Wiltshire. This represents the most complete genealogy to date of the Jenner family and records confirm the existence of the family in the area in the early fifteenth century. This study also demonstrates the utility of wills as genealogical resources, especially prior to the start of parish registers and highlights the importance of sources such as deponents in legal cases to provide key locational genealogical information. The pedigree also illustrates the potential upwards social mobility in seventeenth century Gloucestershire.

Highlights

  • Edward Jenner MD, LLD, FRS (Figure 1) was born on 17 May 1749,1 in Berkeley, Gloucestershire, the son of Stephen Jenner, MA, BD, rector of Rockhampton and the vicar of Berkeley

  • In 1788, during a smallpox outbreak in Gloucestershire, Jenner noted that individuals who worked with cattle and contracted cowpox never contracted smallpox

  • Diverse archival sources have linked the pedigree of Edward Jenner to the Jenner family of Kempsford and environs, which contains important Gloucestershire landowners and extends to at least the start of the 1500s

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Summary

Introduction

Edward Jenner MD, LLD, FRS (Figure 1) was born on 17 May 1749,1 in Berkeley, Gloucestershire, the son of Stephen Jenner, MA, BD, rector of Rockhampton and the vicar of Berkeley. He was a country doctor and is considered one of the most important medical figures of all time and the father of immunology. In 1788, during a smallpox outbreak in Gloucestershire, Jenner noted that individuals who worked with cattle and contracted cowpox (a milder form of smallpox) never contracted smallpox. This was common knowledge in the countryside.

JOHN WILLIAM CHANDLER
THE JOURNAL OF GENEALOGY AND FAMILY HISTORY
Elizabeth Thomas Vincent *
Jane Matthews
Conclusion
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