Dr. Tenison Deane, 
M.D.
[back] 
Smallpox vaccine critics
[Formerly A. A. Surgeon, U. S. Army; A. Police Surgeon, S. F.; Assistant Surgeon S. F. Emergency Hospital; Adjunct to Chair of Surgery, Post Graduate School of Medicine, University of California; Assistant Skin and Venereal Clinic, S. F. Polyclinic; Prof, of Surgery, Pacific Coast Regular College of Medicine; Lecturer on Surgical Pathology and Bacteriology, Etc.]
Book
[1913] The  Crime of 
Vaccination by Dr. Tenison Deane  
Quotes re Deane:
Dr. 
Tennison Deane of San Francisco, in his Crime of Vaccination, tells a 
remarkable story illustrative of this truth.
    Dr. Deane relates that he was 
summering in Northern California in the late 80's, near a wealthy ranchman who 
lived with his wife and seven children on a 10,000-acre ranch in a salubrious 
pine region, 15 miles from the nearest town and having no adjacent neighbors. 
With him on the ranch at that time was a negro foreman who also had a wife and 
five children. Until Dr. Deane appeared on the scene, none of these 16 
persons—white nor black—had ever been vaccinated.
    As a zealous young practitioner, 
very close to his medical school traditions, Dr. Deane quickly warned these 
ranch-dwellers of their "unprotected" state and was able to persuade six of the 
sixteen—the farmer's wife and three children, the negro foreman and his 
12-year-old son—to submit to the vaccinating operation. "A year later," writes 
Dr. Deane, "an epidemic of sore throats broke out in 
this ranch colony which developed into diphtheria in four of the vaccinated,
among them the farmer's wife, and one child died. The 
unvaccinated recovered rapidly from their sore throats, but the farmer's wife 
was paralyzed for a year and eleven years later died of cancer."
    It seems that the San Francisco 
physician was so impressed by this unexpected turn of his well-intentioned 
vaccinating zeal, that he not only kept tab on the subsequent history of the two 
families on the northern ranch, but watched the connection between vaccination 
and other maladies occurring in his general practice. He learned that the other 
four persons whom he had vaccinated on the ranch all died either of tuberculosis 
or cancer within four to twenty-two years from the date of vaccination, while 
none of the unvaccinated in either family died within that period except the 
white farmer who, he says, "died of old age."
    Dr. Deane relates that for many 
years after this early experience with vaccination on the Northern California 
ranch, when a patient came to him with any serious throat, bronchial or 
pulmonary trouble, he made a point of inquiring into his past history, and 
invariably he found a back-ground of calf-pus "immunization" against smallpox. 
Then when he felt he had sufficient data to warrant it, he published The 
Crime of Vaccination (in 1913), which brought down on him the wrath of his 
medical colleagues, and made his professional life in San Francisco so unhappy 
that he voluntarily withdrew from all medical assemblages and finally abandoned 
all medical practice except surgery. 
Hale, 
Annie Riley. The Medical Voodoo. New York: Gotham House, 1936.